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A45254 The reports of that reverend and learned judge, Sir Richard Hutton Knight sometimes one of the judges of the common pleas : containing many choice cases, judgments, and resolutions in points of law in the severall raignes of King James and King Charles / being written in French in his owne hand, and now faithfully translated into English according to order. England and Wales. Court of Common Pleas.; Hutton, Richard, Sir, 1561?-1639. 1656 (1656) Wing H3843; ESTC R14563 150,299 158

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Plaintiff to have execution against the said Thomas Elme and so was aiding and assisting unto the said Thomas Elme Wherupon the Defendant demurred and it was adjudged by the Court that this prosecution of a Writ of Error to discharge himself of an erroneous Iudgment is no breach of the Condition no more then if the Plaintiff had released and he had brought an Audita Querela And it shall be intended in this case of a Suit to be solely commenced by the said Thomas Elme and if he will restrain him that he joyn not in a Writ of Error it ought to be precisely contained in the Condition and shall not be taken by a large Exposition to the forfeiture of an Obligation by a generall and ambiguous sentence It was urged that the Defendants had power to have severall Writs of Error 11 H 6. 9. But the Court resolved that being the Costs were joynt they ought to joyn vide Coke lib 6. fol 25. but the release of one will not bar the other vide 34 H 6. 42. 35 H 6. 10. that this Suit is in discharge of the Defendant and not to charge the Plaintiff and therfore the Condition is not broken vide Dyer 253. A Condition to suffer a Lessee quietly to enjoy the word suffer guide all the sentence in favour of the Obligor and Iudgment cannot be reversed in part and stand for the other part or be reversed against one and stand in force against the other except in speciall cases As where Infant Tenant for life and he in remainder of full age levy a Fine that shall be reversed as to the Infant and stand for the remainder for it is no other then as a Conveyance Mich. 18 Jac. Powell versus Ward AN action of the case was brought for these words Case Words I have matter enough against thee for Iohn Halden hath found forgery against thee and can prove it And after Verdict it was resolved by the Court that the words are too generall will not maintain an Action no more then if one said that another had forget a Warrant for it might be a Warrant for a Buck and this is not right Affirmative Sherley versus Underhill A Quare impedit brought by George Sherley Baronet Quare Impedit Error in Quare Impedit against Underhill and Bursey for presenting to the Vicaridge of the Church of Nether Elington and count of a Nomination as appendent to the Mannor of Elington and Issue therupon for they pretend it to be appendent to the Rectory of Elington And it was found for the Plaintiff at Warwick Assises and Iudgment there for him and a Writ to the Bishop and therupon a Writ of Error was brought in the Kings Bench and it was to remove a Record which was between George Sherley Knight and Baronet and the truth was that Sir George is not neither was named Knight by all the Record And therfore the opinion of the Court was that the word Knight is part of the name and so no Record was removed And it is so materiall that the addition where there is none or the omission where it is Knight makes it no such Record and they perceiving it discontinued their Writ Memorand That though Iudgment was given at the Assises the Writ of Error was directed to the Lord Hobart and the Record is demurrant in the Court of Common Berich And now it was moved that the Iudgment might be amended for it was Quod recuperet presentationem suam ad Ecclesiam praedictam And the value sound of the Church aforesaid And it should be Quod recuperet praesentationem ad vicariam Ecclesiae valorem vicariae Ecclesiae And it was urged that it was not the mis-prision of the Clerk but of the Court and Iudgment erroneous in point of Law is not amendable for if it be Quod capiatur where it should be Quod sit in miserecordia it is not amendable But it was resolved and so awarded by the Court that it should be amended And the reason is because the Verdict is generall and they found for the Plaintiff and the Iudgment ought to agree with the Verdict But it is solely mis-prise by the default of the Clerk for the Record precedent is in every part and in the Issue and Verdict Vicariam Ecclesiae And by the Statute 8 H. 6. cap. 15. that is amendable for the mis-prison of the Clerk in the Record shall be amended though it be in the Iudgment Wilde and Woolfe Mich. 33. 3● Eliz 230. vide Dyer 258. Also Mich. 33. 34 Eliz Rot 230. between Wilde and John Woolfe Ideo considerat est quod praedictus Thomas Wild recuperet versus praedictum Thomas Woolfe where it should be John and Error was brought and it was amended Stepney and Woolfe 42 Eliz Rot 693. An action of the case by Stepney against John Morgan Woolfe Id. consid quod recuperet versus praedictum Morgan Woolfe and there was no such Defendant but John Morgan Woolfe and it was amended upon Error brought in the Exchequer Chamber And vide Coke lib 8. fol. 164. Blackamores case more cases upon this learning where the mis-prison of the Clerk in the entry of the Iudgment of a thing which is apparent and not of necessity shall be amended as in Mis-prision of the summ of Arrerages before and pending the Writ of Annuity shall be amended vide 9 Eliz Dyer 258. Mich. 18 Jac. Sir Thomas Wentworths Case Replevin SIr Thomas Wentworth brought Replevin the Defendant avowed for a Rent granted Demand of Rent with a Nomine poenae after Issue joyned upon other matter and a Nomine poenae and shews not any Demand of the Nomine poenae But the Issue was tryed and found upon other matter viz. Non concessit And now it was moved in Arrest of Iudgment that he avowed for a Nomine poenae and did not alledge any demand therof yet Iudgment was given for the Avowant For it is matter confessed and the Action is a request viz. the Avowry for he is there the Actor And it is but a Circumstance collaterall to the right And in Actions upon the Case founded upon a promise after request a Licet saepius requisit shall be a sufficient Allegation of a request Davies Case Statute-Merchant without day of payment ONe Davies acknowledged a Statute-Merchant at Glocester in three hundred pounds and the Statute did not limit any day of payment and yet an Extent was sued And upon motion by Serjeant Harris a Supersedeas was awarded for that is no Statute for they had not pursued the Authority given by the Statute For the Statute of Acton Buanell 11 E. 1. saies if the Debt be not paid at the day And though Debt upon an Obligation is payable presently if the day be not expressed yet there the Statute appoint a day certain Pasch 15 Jac. Rot. 1714. Cartwright versus Underhill Trover and Conversion AN action of Trover and
this Arraingnment the Iudges assistant sate with their heads covered as the ancient use hath been But the Serjeant at Armes was commanded to make Proclamation That the Iudges and all the Lords not being his Peers and all of the Privy Councell should be covered and others not And this was only in relation to the precedent usage and the right which appertain to the Iudges For in Parliament they being called by Writ use to be covered as oft as the Lord Chancellor or Keeper of the Great Seal which is Speaker puts on his Hat But now it is used that they put not on their Caps untill they have been requested by the Lord Speaker And when they are called into the Star Chamber or to Errors in the Exchequer Chamber they set covered with their Caps Pasch 7 Car. Risam versus Goodwin Mich. 5 Car. Rot. 2512. IN a Writ of Scire facias brought by William Risam against John Goodwin and Richard Peat Administrators of Thomas Cammon the Case was such The Court of Common Bench award not execution upon a Judgment given in grand Sessions in Wales The now Plaintiff William Risam recovered against Thomas Cammon a hundred pounds Debt and ten shillings Costs at the Grand Sessions holden at Carm●rthen and execution awarded and Nulla bona returned And upon Surmise that the said Thomas Cammon was dead and that the now Defendants had taken Letters of Administration a Scire facias issued against them and Nichil returned and after a Writ of Execution and that afterwards being returned by the Sheriff of the County Nulla bona testatoris a Writ issued to the Sheriff of the County of the Town of Carmarthen who returned Devastavit And because that the now Defendants had not Goods within the said County or within the County of the Town of Carmarthen or Jurisdiction of the Grand Sessions the Plaintiff procured a Certiori to the Justices of the Grand Sessions who certified the Record to the Chancery and by Mittimus it came to the Common Bench with directions Quia executio judicii praedicti adhuc restat faciend Mandant quod at the prosecution of the Plaintiff Vos fieri faciat de more secundum legem consuetudinem regni nostri Angliae fuit faciend Wherupon a Writ of Scire facias was awarded to the Sheriff of Hereford against the said Defendants to which they appeared And after many Imparlances they demurred upon the insufficiency of the Writ of Scire facias And this case was argued by Berkley for the Plaintiff and by Henden for the Defendant And the Cases put by Berkley were F N. B 243. a. b. 39 E. 6. 3 4 Ass in ancient Demesne and for the Damages surmised that he had nothing within ancient Demesne 21 E 3. 49. 21 H 7. 33. 8 Ass 27. 30 H 6 7. 3 H 4. 15. 1 Justitutes 59. in Frankalmoigne That Wales is parcel of England 1 E 3. Jurisdiction 45. 22 H 6. 58. 47. E 3. 6. 3. E 3. Quare Impedit 38. 35 H 5. 30. 19 H 6. 12. 52. vide the Statute of 34 H 8. for Wales and Writs of Error Henden argued to the contrary and his first reason was 1. That this Court of the great Sessions is an inferiour Court 2. The Record it self comes not but a Transcript 3. The Statute of 34 H 8. hath appointed the Execution and that should be pursued 4. This Innovation is perillous and never put in practice And he relyed upon the diversity When Iudgment in a peculiar inferiour Court comes into the Kings Bench or into this Court by Writ of Error and is affirmed then the Superiour supplies it and add strength to the Iudgment But when Iudgment is given in a Court of a Corporation and that is removed by Certiorari and sent by Mittimus that shall not be executed there vide 45 E 3. 25. Formedon in London vide 14 E 3. Tryals 23. 15 E 3. Record 35. New Book of Entries the last case in Writ of Error vide 8 E 3. 10. 26 H 6 8. 3 H 6. 16. 7 H 4. 8. 14 H 4. 25. H 5. 11. And he relyed upon 21 H 7. 35. and the case of 39 H 6. 3 4. and the case of ancient Demesne 7 H 9. 18. 37 H 6. 16. Dyer 369. And upon this Case the Iudges consulted and agreed that the Writ was insufficient And so Iudgment was given against the Plaintiff But it was said that upon this Iudgment so sent to this Court the Plaintiff might bring an action of Debt and so have execution But to make this Court an Instrument to serve an inferiour Court and to extend their Iurisdiction by this way as it were by a Windlace it is not lawfull Hil. 7 Car. Napper versus Sanders Pasch 6 Car. Rot. 1148. IN an Ejectione firmae brought by Robert Napper against Henry Sanders upon a Lease by Deed indented made by John Napper and Elizabeth his Wife and Francis Sanders upon Not guilty pleaged Remainder where it shall be said Contingent the Iury gave a speciall Verdict wherupon the Case was such Margaret Sanders seised in Fee makes a Feoffment to the use of her self for life without impeachment of Wast and after to the use of the Feeoffees for eighty years if one Nicholas Sanders and Elizabeth his Wife should live so long and if the said Elizabeth survive Nicholas her Husband then to the use of the said Elizabeth for life without impeachment of Wast and after the decease of the said Elizabeth to the use of Postumus Sanders Son of the said Nicholas and Elizabeth in tail And for default of such Issue to the use of Elizabeth Wife of the said Iohn Napper and Dorothy Sanders and the said Francis Sanders one of the Lessors and to the Heirs of their bodies remainder to the right Heirs of Margaret the Feoffor And there was a clause in the said Indenture that the intent of the Estate for years to the Feoffees was that the said Elizabeth Sanders might have the profits and not Nicholas her Husband who was a Prodigall Margaret Sanders dies and Dorothy dies without Issue the Feoffee enter Elizabeth Sanders dies Nicholas is yet alive and Posthumus dies without Issue Iohn Napper and his Wife and the said Francis entred and were possessed untill the Defendant as Son and Heir of the said Margaret entred and ousted them Et si super totam Materiam c. And the sole question was whether the remainder in tail to Posthumus and the remainder in tail to Elizabeth and Francis were contingent or executed And it was resolved by all the Court that the remainders were not contingent in the Estate for life which was to come to Elizabeth Sanders the Wife of the said Nicholas but were vested presently And it was agreed that the Estate for life if she survive her Husband was contingent and when that had hapned being by way of Limitation of an use it shall be interposed when the Contingent
to the charges But to offer any particular summ is not necessary because they know not what summ is disbursed and that is to be assessed by the Commissioners And the words for the charge of the Commission is to be extended to all charges arising in suing forth the Commission and in execution and defence therof Also it was resolved that at any time before the distribution made they may come and pray to be joyned But after the four months passed and any distribution made though it be but of part then they come too late For by this means the distribution which is made and wherby some of the Creditors shall receive more shall be utterly avoided and another proportion made which was not the intent of the Statute Pasch 18 Jac. Mason versus Thompson Case AN action upon the case was brought for these words I charge thee with Felony for taking money forth from Iohn Spaci's Pocket and I will prove it Words Henden moved in Arrest of Iudgment that these words were not actionable First because that it is not any direct affirmative that he is a Felon and for that he vouched a case as he said adjudged in the Kings Bench Masters bear Witnesse that he is a Theef The second reason was because that the matter subsequent do not contains matter which must of necessity be Felony but stands indifferent For if it be not privily and secretly it is not Felony and it may be by way of sport or trespasse For as one said That he is a Theef and stole his Timber it is not actionable for it might be Timber cut or Timber growing so to say That he stole his Corn or his Apples or his Hope For in Mitiorem partem verba sunt accipienda And it seemed to the Lord Hobart that the first words viz. I charge thee with Felony are actionable for the Constable if he be there present ought to apprehend him therupon and it is a plain Affirmative I arrest thee of high Treason Iustice Winch prima facie held that the words were actionable and not qualified by the subsequent words as it should be if he had said For thou hast stoln my Apple Trees standing in my Orchard that could not be Felony but it is not so there for it may be Felony and ex causa dicendi it shall be taken Felony in these words for taking money c. Warburton and Hutton was of opinion that the Action lay not This Case was moved in Mich. 18 Jac. And then the opinion of the Court praeter Warburton qui haesitavit was that the Action did not lye Ideo memorand quod quetens nil capiat per breve Trin. 18 Jac. Hall versus Woollen JOhn Hall an Attorney of this Court Case Consideration of an As●ur●p sit brought an action upon the case against Woollen and declared that wheras the Defendant was possessed of an House and Land in Mekon Mowbray in the County of Leicester for one term of the Lease of Sir John Woodward And wheras one Webb was in communication of buying the said Lease of Woollen and Woollen could not sell it without the assent of Sir John W. The Defendant in consideration that the Plaintiff would procure licence of the said Sir John he promised to pay to him so much as he should disburse and deserve therfore And averred that he did procure a License and delivered it to the Defendant and disbursed such a summ and deserved for his labour such a summ and the Defendant upon the Count did demur And the question was whether that were a good consideration or no for it did not appear that there was any condition to restrain him from making an Assignment and if I promise that wheras I am obliged to A. if you will procure B. which is a stranger to make a Release therof to me I will pay you forty pounds though it be done at my instance no action lies for it is apparant that B. could not release the Obligation But it was adjudged that is a good consideration for it appears that there was privity between them and it may be that he had promised that he would not assign it without his licence And in good discretion it was convenient to have it also it was at his instance and for his satisfaction And it hath been adjudged if one promise forty pounds to another if he can procure the assent of the Mother of a woman though he may do it without such consent yet it is a good consideration Mich. 18 Jac. Clerk versus Wood. CLerk brought an action upon the case against one Wood Case alias Warren and count that he was seised of an house and twenty acres of land c in Thursfield and that he and all those whose Estate he hath have had a Common in seven acres in Thursfield And that he and all those c. have had one way leading through the said seven acres Ven. fac upon prescription for a way in divers Town● and from thence into one Common way leading to Buntingford and from Buntingford to Blakeley And that the Defendant had plowed and turned up the seven acres and estopped the way The Defendant pleaded not guilty and the Venire facias awarded de Tursfield And it was moved in Arrest of Iudgment by Serjeant Jones that it ought to be from all the Towns through which he claim his way for he ought to prove it in evidence viz. that he had a way or otherwise he is not endamnified But it was resolved that the tryall was good for Not guilty is properly a deniall of trespasse and disturbance and though he ought to prove title to the way yet it is sufficient if he prove title to the way by and through the seven acres upon evidence And yet if the Prescription had been traversed then he ought to prove all the way any the tryall shall be from every Town through which the way is pleaded to be extended quod vide 10 E. 4. fol. 10. where it was in two Counties and the Venire facias shall be from both and the tryall shall not be by Nisi prius vide the case between Reyner and Waterhouse supra Mich. 16 Jac. Rot. 2344. Lamb versus Thompson Debt A Condition not to be assisting to another hinders him not to bring a Writ of Error joyntly with him EDmund Lamb brought an action of Debt against Richard Thompson upon an Obligation of forty pounds the Condition whereof was If the Defendant shall not be assisting or any waies aiding unto Thomas Elme or any other person for the said Thomas Elme in any Actions Suits Vexations c. to be commenced and prosecuted against the said Plaintiff c. That then c. the Defendant pleaded Negative The Plaintiff reply that he such a day brought Trespasse against the said Thomas Elme and the now Defendant and had Iudgment and that the Defendant joyned with him in a Writ of Error in hinderance of the
Defendant brought a Writ of Error in the Exchequer Chamber upon a new Statute and after divers terms Hall died and after the Plaintiff was non-suited without mention made of his death Tadcaster brought two Scire facias against Hobs and upon two Nihils had Iudgment Hobs brought an Audita Querela alledging the death of Hallowell before Scire facias and before Capias and it was adjudged that the Audita Querela well say and Hil 4 Jac Rot 975. between Timberley and Calverly Scire facias brought against the Bail and he pleaded that the Principall died before Capias returned against him And Iudgment upon argument given against the Plaintiff The like Iudgment between Iustice Williams and the Sureties of one Vaughan Hil. 19 Jac. Rot. 312. or 3125. Walrond versus Hill London Debt WAlrond brought an action of debt upon an Obligation of three hundred pounds against William Hill with Condition that if Thomas Harris and Elizabeth his Wife One bound to levy a Fine before such a day who shall do the first act before the end of Easter Term next shall levy a Fine before the Iustices of the Common Pleas by due course of Law to the use of the Plaintiff that then c. the Defendant pleaded that before the end of the said Easter Term the Plaintiff did not purchase any Writ of Covenant pro fine leuand wherupon a Fine might be levied according to the course of Law The Plaintiff replyed that the fifteenth of April the said Thomas for money enfeoffed another of parcel of the Land that was to be conveyed by the Fine And that the said Thomas and Elizabeth his Wife have not any Estate or Interest in the said parcell so conveyed wherof they may levy a Fine And upon this Replication the Defendant demurred And upon argument at Bar by Serjeant Harvey for the Plaintiff and Serjeant Henden for the Defendant the first question was If the Bar be good Intant que le Defendent est oblige That Thomas Harris and Elizabeth his Wife shall levy a Fine he ought to procure that to be done at his perill semble al 4 H. 7. 3 H. 6. Condition that John S. a stranger shall take Alice D. to his Wife before Mich. If I. S. refuse the Obligation is forfeited And therfore it was urged that he ought to procure a Writ of Covenant at his perill But the Lord Hobart held that the Plaintiff ought to procure the Writ of Covenant to have made himself capable of the Fine And he put this case if I. S. be obliged that I. D. shall enfeoff I.N. the Obligee such a day I. N. ought to be upon the Land or ought to make a Letter of Attorney to receive the Livery or otherwise the Obligation is not forfeited And when a Covenant is to levy a Fine he which is to do the first act c. vide Palmers case Coke lib 5. fol 127. 4 E. 3. 39. 18 E. 3. 27. 11 H. 4 18. 21 E 4. 2. The second question was whether this Obligation be ferfeited being that the said Thomas Harris had made a Bargain and Sale of part of the Land to another before so that he was disabled at the time to levy a Fine And we all agreed that the Condition was impossible and is all one as if he had disabled himself afterwards as in Maynes case Coke lib 5. 21. where the Covenant was to make a new Lease upon surrender of the former Lease there if he which ought to make the new Lease disables himself to make a new Lease and to accept of the Surrender by granting the Reversion for years he ought not to do the first act viz. Surrender but the Covenant is broken And in this case it is all one as if one who had granted the Reversion for years or for life Covenant that he upon Surrender will make a new Lease he had broken this Covenant being disabled at the time And it was said and agreed by the Court that the Fine to be levied ought to be an effectuall Fine which might operate to convey the Land according to the Covenant Burnell and Brook One case was vouched in this case to be between Burnell and Brook where the Condition was that he should acknowledge a Iudgment and a good Bar that the Plaintiff had not purchased an Originall Writ for he ought to make himself capable of Iudgment acknowledged to him vide 34 E. 1. Fitz Debt 164. A Condition that if he present the Obligee to a Benefice that then c. Though the Obliges taken Wife by which he is disabled to take it put he ought to present and offer him to the Ordinary to refuse him Vide 28 E 4. 6. where parcell of the Land was recovered yet Debt lies for entry Damages recovered in a Court of ancient Demeasn which case was then vouched but it is not much to the purpose And afterwards we all agreed that the Plaintiff should have Iudgment Hord versus Cordery A President was shewn which was thus IN the County of Wiltes Richard Hord Clerk Vicar of Chute Case brought an action upon the Case against William Cordery and Bridget his Wife and Dorothy Cox Conspiracy for one malicious confederacy of charging the Plaintiff with the felonious Raye of the said Dorothy Cox and procured him to be examined before Sir Anthony Hungerford a Iustice of Peace and therupon was bound in a Recognizance to appear at the next generall Sessions of the Peace at Devises and from thence was bound over to the Assises And there the Defendants An 15 Jac before Sir Thomas Flemming and Tanfield Iustices of Assise preferred one Bill of Indictment of their malice aforesaid and by the procurement of the said William and B. the said Dorothy shewed to the grand Inquest whether it were true or false And the Iury perceiving the malice and the falsi●y did not find it to be true and gave their Verdict by Ignorance Vpon Not guilty pleaded by William and Bridget and non informatus by Dorothy the Iury found for the Plaintiff and after a Writ of Error An 15 Jac and 20 marks costs for the delay Ego vidi recordum est bien pleivement aver que il ne ravish le feme est ent Hil. 10 Jac. Rot. 92. 1. 1. Trin. 20 Jac. Hawkins versus Cutts HAwkins brought an action upon the case against Cutts Case and declared that he was of good Fame c. and for the space of eight years last past had used the Art and Mystery of a Baker Pandopatoritae and had gained his living by buying and selling the Defendant said of him He is a Bankrupt Knave And not guilty Words it was found for the Plaintiff And in Arrest of Iudgment it was moved that it is not shewn that he was a common Baker neither had used the Trade but used the Art and Mystery of a Baker And there is as Serjeant Hobart said as much skill
Yelverton and I were opinion that the Debt is gone for it is at the suit of the King and Iudgment is given for the King And there shall be an answer to the King And we relyed upon the cases vouched by the Lord Coke but Iustice Harvey and Crook to the contrary And upon conference with all the Iustices of Serjeants Inne it was resolved that this action was at the suit of the party for he might be Non-suited vide 25 H 8. Br. Non-suit that the Informer may be Non-suited vide 6 E. 2. Fitz Non-suit 13. when the Iury come again to deliver their Verdict the King cannot discharge them and be Non-suited and the King cannot discharge this action And his Attorney reply not as in an Information Clotworthy versus Clotworthy Amendments Debt SImon Clotworthy brought an action of Debt against John C. Cosin and Heir of Bartholmew C. And the Imparlance Roll is Quod cum praedictus B. cujus consanguineus heres idem Johannes est viz. filius Johannis Clotworthy fratris praedicti B. C. And upon the Plea Roll upon which Iudgment is given this space was perfected and Iudgment for the Plaintiff and now the Defendant brought a Writ of Error and it was moved to be amended And if the Imparlance Roll shall be amended which is the foundation of the subsequent Rolls is the question For it is commonly holden that the Plea Roll shall he amended by the Imparlance but not e converso Hil. 18 Jac. Rot. 67● Walker versus Worsley Amendments WAlker brought an action of Debt against Worsley Debt as Son and Heir of Thomas W. in the Imparlance Roll which was entred Mich 18 Jac Rot 576. the words which bind the Heir were omitted viz. Ad quam quidem solutionem obligasset se Heredes suos but they were in the Plea Roll And after Iudgment that was assigned for Error in the Kings Bench and it was amended in the Common Bench by the Court vide there that it was by the fault and mis-prision of the Clerk who had the Obligation and so amendable by the Statute of 8 H 6. cap 15. 1. Hil. 9 Jac. Rot. 516. Govard versus Dennet GOvard against Dennet and Iudgment and the name of the Attorney viz. Henry was omitted in the Imparlance Roll and it was in the Plea Roll Henry and after Error brought it was amended Mich. 16 Jac. Rot. 581. Arrowsmith's Case THe Imparlance Roll Trin 16 Jac Rot 1727. Debt for three hundred pounds against Arrowsmith for part sur emisset and the other part sur in simul computasset And in the Imparlance Roll both parcells did not amount to three hundred pounds but wanted six pounds therof and after Error brought it was amended Pasch 12 Jac. Rot. 420. Godhow versus Bennet REplevin by Godhow against Bennet divers spaces in the Imparlance Roll were supplyed in the Plea Roll after Verdict Hil. 12 Jac. Rot. 420. Parker versus Parker THe Imparlance Roll was Mich 12 Jac Rot 547. Parker against Parker in Trover and Conversion the Imparlance Roll wanted the day and year of the possession and conversion but the Issue Roll was after the Verdict and motion in Arrest of Iudgment amended Mich. 2 Car. Crocker versus Kelsey JOhn Canterson and Agnes his Wife Tenants in speciall tail had Issue a Son Lease made by Feme in speciall tail viz. John and John the Father died John the Son levied a Fine with Proclamations to the use of himself in Fee Agnes leased to John Herring and Margaret his Wife Lessors to the Plaintiff for one and twenty years rendring Rent c. by vertue wherof they entred Agnes died John the Son entred and afterward the said John Herring and Margaret his Wife entred And the said John the Son made his Will in writing and by that devised the Land to Kelsey the Defendant and another in Fee and died John Herring and Margaret leased to Crocker the Plaintiff who entred and being ousted by Kelsey brought Ejectione firmae And this speciall Verdict being found Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff and now affirmed upon Error brought in the Exchequer Chamber Mich. 2 Car. Franklin versus Bradell FRanklin a Woman servant brought an action upon the case upon a promise against John Bradell Consideration in an Assumpsit ex post facto And count that wheras she had served the Defendant and his Wife and done to them loyall service the Defendant after the death of his Wife in consideration of the service which the Plaintiff had done to the Defendant and his Wife promised to pay her thirteen shillings four pence upon request and alledged request and non-payment And after Verdict for the Plaintiff it was moved in Arrest of Iudgment upon the Book of 13 Eliz. Dyer that this is no sufficient consideration because that it is not alledged that the Plaintiff at the request of the Defendant had served him Also it was not sufficient because that it was done after the service performed And it was answered that it was a good consideration and that the service was to the benefit of the Defendant And therfore in consideration that the Plaintiff had married the Daughter of the Defendant he promise to pay twenty pounds it is a good consideration and so in consideration that you have been my surely to such a man for such a Debt I promise to save you harmlesse And in consideration that the Plaintiff was Baile for the Defendant he promised to give him a Horse this is good And in consideration that I.S. being a Carpenter had well built my house I promise to give him five pounds And Iudgment for the Plaintiff Hil. 2 Car. Hearne versus Allen. Entred 22 Jac Rot 1875. Oxford 1. RIchard Hearne brought an Ejectione firmae against John Allen Ejectione firmae for two acres of Land in Langham upon a Lease made by Anne Keene which was the Wife of Edward Keene and upon Not guilty pleaded a speciall Verdict was found Richard Keene was seised of an house in Chippin-norton Devise and of two acres of Land there in Fee and of two acres of Meadow in Langham in Fee used with the said Messuage which were holden in Socage And by his Will in writing dated the 20. May 30 Eliz. he devised the said house Cuni omnibus singulis ad inde pertinentibus vel aliquo modo spectantibus to Tho. K. and his Heirs for ever And for want of Heirs of him the said Thomas then to one Anne K. the Daughter of the Devisor and her Heirs for ever And for default c. then to Iohn K. his Cosin and his Heirs for ever And by the same Will devised his Goods and all his Lands to Eliz. his Wife during her Widow-hood and died Elizabeth his Wife entred Thomas the Son entred upon the Wife and disseised her and having enfeoffed one Edward K. in Fee died and Tho. K. also died without Issue Edward K. by his Will devised
pleaded Not guilty absque hoc that the said suit and tryall was for the said Common And Issue being joyned it was found for the Plaintiff and Damages to twenty pounds And in Arrest of Iudgment it was moved that now it appears that it was not for the maintenance of the Title of Common that it could not be for the tryall therof because he did not plead the Title of Common which had been the proper apt way for the tryall therof And when the Iury find that which is contrary and repugnant to Law that is repugnant and not good And this case was strongly argued by Serjeant Davenport in Arrest of Iudgment and by Attho for the having of Iudgment And first he said That although there was a Parlance and Communication concerning the Common yet the promise is to defend this action brought by Palmer and is pro defentione of the Common not generally but against Palmer and the promise is to pay the Moyety of the Charges if he prosecute the said Suit untill the determination therof so that if it had been found against the now Plaintiff the now Defendant ought to have paid the Moyety of the said charges And it is not agreed that he shall plead title by Prescription for the Common but that he should prosecute it untill the determination of the Suit for the maintenance of the Common And the Court gave Iudgment for the Plaintiff for it might be for the maintenance of their Common against Palmer for if he had not the Soil therof but had inclosed it as part of his Wasts the Plaintiff could not plead the Title to Common without admitting the Soil and Free-hold to be in Palmer And if one had been of councell and to advise a Plea if he had not discovered that Palmer had no Title he would have advised him to have pleaded Not guilty for if the said Palmer had no Title to the Soil which the now Plaintiff could not know it should be found against him and so this Plea might have been in maintenance of Common And the Lord Richardson who at first doubted now concurred and sayd that he was fully satisfied Trin 3. Car. Chapman versus Chapman Debt REbecca Chapman brought an action of Debt against Henry Chapman upon an Obligation with Condition to perform the Covenants contained in certain Indentures The Defendant pleaded a generall performance the Plaintiff replyed and shewed that she made a Lease to the Defendant of certain Cole-pits rendring eighty pounds Rent and that the Defendant did not pay the Rent at the day Obligation conditioned for the payment of Rent demand is not necessary to be alledged after generall performance pleaded wherupon the Defendant demurred And it was adjudged upon Argument for the Plaintiff but the matter upon which the Defendant justified came not in question viz. If the Plaintiff ought to have demanded the Rent And that the Obligation had not altered the nature of the Rent it being generall to perform all Covenants and the reason is apparent for when the Defendant plead performance of all the payments that is intended an actuall payment for he cannot now rejoyn that he made tender for that shall be a departure from his Plea And that was the reason of the Iudgment which was Pasch 43 Eliz. between John Specot Plaintiff Specot and Shere and Emanuel Shere Defendant upon the like case in debt upon an Obligation wheras the Defendant had granted an Annuity or Rent of six and twenty shillings eight pence to the Plaintiff for one and twenty years the Condition was that if the said Shere perform all the Covenants c. conteined in the said Writing so that the Plaintiff may enjoy the Rent according to the intent therof then c. the Defendant recited the Deed and pleaded performance the Plaintiff replyed that the Defendant had not paid the said eight and twenty shillings eight pence upon such a Feast wherupon the Defendant demurred and adjudged for the Plaintiff And the Lord Coke in his private Book as the Lord chief Baron said had shewn this reason If the Defendant had pleaded specially That he was upon the Land and ready to pay and to make tender but the Plaintiff did not come to demand it then the Plaintiff ought to shew that he did demand it which seems to be agreed 14 E 4. 4. 2 H. 6. 57. 11 E 4. 10. 21 E 4 42. but Brook 6 E 6. Tender makes this diversity when the Condition is expressed to pay the Rent that alters the nature of the Rent But otherwise when it is to perform Covenants And the Iudgment given in the Kings Bench was affirmed Trin. 3 Car. Stephens versus Oldsworth IN a Quare Impedit brought by Stephens and Cross against Oldsworth and Holmes for the Church of Lechamseed the Incumbent pleaded Quare Impedit Tenure that he was Parson Imparsonee to the Church of the presentation of the King and confessed the Seisin of Sir Anthony Greenwood under whom by the grant of the next avoidance the Plaintiffs claim but said that the said Sir Anthony held the said Mannor of the King per redditum ac wardam Castri Dower to be paid yearly 8 s. 1 d. ob q. And among other matters which I omit it was resolved that it was Socage Tenure for a Rent for Castleguard is Socage vide Littleton 26. Coke lib 4. fol 6. 5 E 4. fol. 128. F.N.B. 256. a Mich. 3 Car. Young versus Young Formedon in Descender Act of Court shall be amended IN a Formedon in the Descender brought by Young against Young the Demandant was within age and was admitted to prosecute by his Guardians and that appears by a generall admittance before Iustice Jones And this admittance was first entred in the remembrance of Gulstons Office and afterwards in the Plea Roll And the Demandant which is admitted by the Court viz. per Guardianos ad hoc per Curiam admissus and there the Concessit per Curiam quod prosequatur per Gardianos is entred and so is the Roll upon the View And in the Philizers Roll the recitall is That the Demandant per Gardianos admissus obtulit se And in this Roll the Concessit per curiam of admitting the Demandant to prosecute by his Guardian is not entred And after Verdict and Iudgment for the Demandant a Writ of Error was brought and that assigned for Error And it was moved that it might be entred upon the Philizers Roll. And it was resolved by all the Court that it should be supplyed and entred upon the Philizers Roll and the principall reason was because that this admittance by his Guardians is the act of the Court and not like to the entry of the Warrant of Attorney nor to the Essoin Roll vide Dyer 330. otherwise it is of Admission by Prochein ami Where an Infant ought to appeare by Gardian and where by Prochein amy vide Rawlins case Coke lib. 4. fol 53. The
use of the Kings Bench is never to enter the Admission but only to recite it in the Count vide 11 H 7. Rot 412. In a Writ of Right by Baron and Feme and another Feme Infants there per custodes good vide 8 E 4 5. for the Mainprise entred in another Term lib Intractionum fol 366. It was vouched by Croke and affirmed by Yelverton in one Simpsons case in Durham Simpsons case where the Tenant was by Prochein amy where it should be by Guardian was Error The Presidents are that an Infant when he sue may be by Guardian or Prochein amy the one or the other but when he is sued it shall be by Guardian Mich. 3 Car. Wolfe versus Hole WOlfe an Attorney Plaintiff against Hole by a Writ of Priviledge Amendment and he Count upon an Assumpsit And after Verdict given and Iudgment a Writ of Error was brought and moved that there was a default in the Imparlance Roll viz. fault de trover pledges which was as it ought to be in the Plea Roll And it was moved that it might be amended and after debate at Bar by Henden and Davenport it was resolved that the not finding of Pledges is not matter of form but matter of substance and it concerns the King for if the cause to amerce the Plaintiff the Iudgment is Ideo le Plaintiff ses pledge sont Amerce and that it is not aided by the Statute of 18 Eliz. quod quaere and vide 12 Eliz Dyer 288. there is a Case written by me that An 17 Jac was amended after the Verdict and in one Hillaries case and vide th●re in Dyer that the Plaintiff when he is sued by Priviledges ought to find pledges and that as well as when a Bill is filed against an Attorney But now because that it was assigned for Error and that if it be amendable the Iustices of the Kings Bench would amend it this Court would not but if it had been in the Imparlance Roll and omitted in the Plea Roll it should be amended vide 18 E 4. 9. that Pledges may be entred at any time Hil. 2. Car. Rot. 565. Hilton versus Paule RIchard Hilton brought an action of Trespasse against Robert Paule Trespasse Which shall be said a Parish Church within the act of 43 Eliz. for the maintenance of th● poor for the taking of a Saddle at Stoke-Goldenham And upon Not guilty pleaded the Iury gave a speciall Verdict Viz. That the Parish of Hinkley was de temps dont memory c. and yet is an ancient Rectory and a Church Parochiall And that the Town of Stoke-Goldenham is an ancient Town and parcell of the Rectory of Hinkley And that from the time of H. 6. and afterwards untill this time there hath been and is in the Town of Goldenham a Church which by all the said time hath been used and reputed as a Parish And that the Inhabitants of Stoke-G by all the said time had had all Parochiall Rights and Church-wardens And that the Tow●● of Stoke-Goldenham is distant two miles from Hinkley And the Verdict concluded it it should seem to them that Stoke Goldenham is a Parish for the relief of Poor within the Statute of 43 Eliz. cap. 2. then they find for the Plaintiff if not for the Defendant And this Case was argued by Serjeant Barkley and he vouched Linwood fol 89. and said that there is Ecclesia major minor and a dependant Church upon the principall and another Church and which is found to be used and reputed ergo it is not a Parish And that the Exception of the Chappell of Foulnes which by the Statute is made a Parish proves that Chappell and Parish are not within the Statute he vouched 4 E 4. 39. and 5 E 4. to prove that divers Town may be one Parish And the Lord Richardson said that it is a clear case that this is a Parish within the intent of the Statute of 43 Eliz. for the relief of Poor And that the Church-wardens and Overseers of Stoke-Goldenham might assesse for the relief of the Poor And though it be found that after the time of H. 6. and untill now it had been used as a Parish Church that doth not exclude that it was not used so before And a Reputative Chantery is within the Statute of Chantries 1 E 6. And this Statute being made for the relief of the Poor and that they might not wander therfore the intent of the Statute is to confine the relief to Parishes then in esse and so used And every one of the Court delivered their opinion and concurred And so Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff Hil. 3 Car. Peto versus Pemmerton Mich. 3 Car. Rot. 414. Replevin SIr Edward Peto Knight brought Replevin against Robert Pemmerton and Giles Thompson The Defendants made Conusance as Bayliffs to Humphrey Peto Where Grantee of a Rent-charge takes a Lease of part of the Land and surrenders it the Rent shall be revived and that Humphrey the Father of the said Humphry was seised of the place in which c. in Fee and by his Deed granted the Rent of six pounds to the said Humphrey his Son for life out therof to Commence after the Death of the Grantor and shewed that Humphrey the Father died and for Rent arrear c. The Plaintiff in Bar to the Avowry confesse the grant and seisin of the Land and that the said Humphrey died seised of the Land out of which the Rent was granted and that that descended to William and from William to the Plaintiff who entred and demised to the said Humphrey the Son parcell of the Lands unde c. for five hundred years by force of which Lease the said Humphrey had entred and was possessed The Defendants replyed that afterwards and before any part for which they made Conusance was arrear the said Humphrey the Son surrendred the said Lease to Sir Edward Peto to which surrender the said Sir Edward agreed wherupon the Plaintiff demurred And this Case was argued by Henden and he said that when the act of him which had the Rent made the suspension his act alone could not revive it But a Rent suspended might be revived by the act of Law or by the joynt act or agreement of the parties by whom the suspension was made 21 H. 7. 7. 19 H 6. 4. 19 H 6. 45. 7 H 6. 2. As for the personall things when they are suspended they are extinct unlesse it be in auter droit as if Feme Executrix take the Debtor to Husband and the Baron dies the Wife shall have an action of Debt against his Executors One reason in this case is because that by the surrender which is accepted the Contract is determined and that is by the act of both And by the surrender the Estate for years is extinguisht to all purposes as to that to which the surrender was made as if he had granted a Rent now it shall
commence and he is seised in Fee and may hold it charged with both the Rents 2 H 5. 7. 5 H 5. 34. Ass 15. And this Estate surrendred is in Esse as to the benefit of strangers but not as to the benefit of him who accepted it for hee is seised in Fee vide Lillingstons case And the Court was of opinion that the Rent was revived and that the Contract is now determined Nota that this grant to Humphrey the Son for years was but upon confidence to assign it over If Grantee of an Estate for life of a Rent take an Estate for life of part of the Land and surrender it yet the Rent is not revived for it was extinct in this case if he had granted his interest quere and if he had granted his interest over to I. S. and he had surrendred it that shall not revive the Rent because that he had by his granting over of his interest discharged of the Rent extinguish it quaere but in the principall case the Rent was suspended by the acceptance of the Lease and is revived by the surrender And it was agreed that where Lessee for years surrender to which the Lessor agree and accept it the possession and the interest is in him without entry Hil. 3 Car. Sandford versus Cooper SAndford brought a Scire facias against Cooper to have execution of a Iudgment for sixteen pounds Sci. fac which Iudgment was de Oct. Hil. An. 2 Car. And one being returned Ter-tenant pleaded that after the Iudgment viz. 22 Jan. he against whom the Iudgment was viz. John Bill acknowledged a Statute-staple and shewe● that by that the Land was extended and after upon liberate delivered in Execution and demand Iudgment wherupon the Plaintiff demurred And the sole question was to what day the Iudgment shall have relation for it appears in the pleading To what day a Judgment shall have relation that the twentieth day of January was the day of Essoin and it seemed to the Court that the Iudgment should have relation to the first day of this return as well as if it had been a return in the Tearm viz. 15 Hil. for otherwise it should be uncertain And he may be Non-suited upon this day vide 5 Eliz. Dyer fol. 200. That a recovery being in the first return the Warrant of Attorney made and dated the fourth day is taken to be a Warrant after Iudgment and vide 33 E 6. fol 45 46. the principall case there If a Nisi prius taken after the day of Essoin shall be good and it is adjudged not for the first day is the return And it was agreed that in Common Parlance the first day of the Tearm is the fourth day viz. If one be obliged to appear or to pay monies the first day of such a Tearm Loquendum est ut vulgus But the Law relate the Iudgment to the first day of every return vide Dyer 361. a Release pleaded after the Darrein Continuance which was dated the one and twentieth of January which was the day after the Essoin day and it was not good for it ought to be before the utas Hillarii Gillinghams case And my Brother Harvey and Crook vouched one Gillinghams case viz. A Release of all Iudgments before the fourth day and after the day of Essoin would not release this Iudgment which was de Octab. Hil. vide many cases vouched to this purpose 4 E 3.34 H 6. 20. a Writ of Error brought after the utas and before the fourth that is good and brought after Iudgment vide 22 H 6. 7. a. a Writ of Error ought to be brought after the Iudgment rendred or otherwise no Execution shall be stayed And all the Court gave Iudgment for the Plaintiff in this Scire facias Hil. 3 Car. Holt versus Sambach Trin. 2 Car. Rot. 731. Replevin Tenant for life with a remainder to him in tail expectant and remainder in fee grant a rent in fee afterwards had fee by fine SIr Thomas Holt brought Replevin against Thomas Sambach in which upon Demurrer the Case was Sir William Catesby being Tenant for life of Land the remainder in tail to Robert his Son the remainder in Fee granted a Rent of ten pounds by the year out therof to William Sambach in Fee and Sir William and Robert his Son levied a Fine with Proclamations which was to the use of the said Sir William in Fee and afterwards the said Sir William enfeoffed Sir Thomas Holt and died Robert had Issue Robert and died And the Court was of opinion that this Grant in Fee is good for he had an Estate for life in possession and an Estate of remainder in tail and remainder in Fee in himself to charge and then the Fee-simple passe by the Grant And although that Robert the Son might have avoided it yet when he had barred the Estate-tail c. by Fine to the use of Sir William now Sir William Catesby had by this acceptance of this Estate to himself avoided the means by which he might have avoided the Rent And although that in Bredons case in the first Book when Tenant for life and he in the remainder in tail joyn in a Fine rendring Rent to Tenant for life that passeth from every one that which lawfully might passe and that the Rent continue after the death of him in the remainder in tail without Issue yet in this case the Estate is barred by the Fine and united to that Estate which William the Grantor had and now William is seised in Fee and this Rent made unavoidable The Case was well argued by Henden and Davenport but it appeared that the Conusance was for twenty shillings part of the rent of fifty pounds behind and for fifty pounds parcell of two hundred pounds arrear for Nomine poenae and did not say in his Avowry that he was satisfied of the rest And therfore Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff vide 20 E 4. 2 a. 48 E. 3. 3. Chichley versus the Bishop of Ely Quare Impedit DAme Dorothy Chichley brought a Quare Impedit against Nich Bishop of Ely and Mark Thompson the Incumbent for the Church of Wimple and counted that Thomas Chichley was seised of the Advowson of the said Church in Fee as in grosse and presented to it being void Edward Marshall which was Instituted and Inducted and afterward the said Thomas Chichley died seised and the Advowson descended to his Son and Heir Sir Thomas Chichley Traverse upon Traverse who by his Deed indented c. for the increase of the Ioynture of the Plaintiff granted the said Advowson to Thomas East and Edward Anger and their Heirs to the use of the said Plaintiff for life and afterwards to the use of the Heirs Males of the body of Sir Thomas Chichley and that by force therof she was seised for life And the Church being hold by the death of the said Edward Marshall she presented and the
reasons the Court gave Iudgment for the Plaintiff And Serjeant Ward argued well and vouched divers good Cases The Writ of Detinue supposeth properly in the thing demanded vide 50 E. 3. 6. Cook versus Cook WIlliam Cooke alias Barker brought an Action of Wast against George Cook alias Barker and count against him as Tenant for life How a Writ of Wast shall be where there is a lease for life remainder in fee. of the Lease of George Cook and intitle himself to the Reversion Ex assignatione of the said George and shews that George Cook being seised in Fee and the Ter-tenant in Socage devised the Land to the Defendant for life the remaineer in tail to the Plaintiff And upon the Count the Defendant demurred And the Question was how the Writ should be where a Lease is made for life the remainder in Fee for it cannot be Quod de ipso tenet And it seems that the Writ shall be speciall upon the Case as a Fine levied to one for life the remainder in Fee the Writ shall be speciall upon the Case And it seems that it shall never be Ex assignatione but where the Reversion is granted over vide 38 E 3. fol. 23. the direct Case and vide 38 H. 6. fol. 30. in the Writ of Consimili casu vide F N B fol 207. in the Writ of Consimili casu qui illud tenet ad vitam D. ex Assignatione praedicti B. quam I. filius heres R. qui quidem R. illud praefat D. demisit ad eundem terminum inde fecit praefat B. c. The Estate for life with a Remainder over is but one Estate and it was a question at Common Law if he in remainder shall have an action of Wast vide 41 E 3. 16. 42 E 3. 19. 50 E. 3. 3. Reg. 75. But at this day the Law is cleer that he in remainder shall have an action of Wast F N B fol 207. but these Books prove that the Writ of Wast ought to be Ex divisione non ex assignatione Mich. 6 Caroli Case Words AN action of the case was brought for these words Thou art a Theef and hast stoln one Passions Lamb and marked it and denied it And upon Not guilty pleaded and Verdict for the Plaintiff Serjeant Ashley moved in Arrest of Iudgment because that it is not shewn whose Lamb for Passions is no word of any signification without the name of Baptisme And the Court was of opinion that the Count was good for it had been sufficient to call him Theef and then the subsequent matter and words aggravate and contain matter of Felony And it is a generall Rule that when the first words are actionable the latter words which toll the force therof ought to be such as do not contain Felony Babbington versus Wood. BAbbington brought an action of debt against Wood upon an Obligation of 600 l. the Condition was That if Wood resign a Benefice upon request that then the Obligation should be void A Cond●tion to resign a Benefice upon request And the Condition was entred the Defendant demurred and Iudgment in Banco Regis pro querente And upon Error brought Iudgment was affirmed in the Exchequer Chamber for this Obligation is not voidable by the Statute of 14 Eliz. which makes Obligations of the same force as Leases made by Parsons of their Gleaves viz. Per non residency And it doth not appear by the Plea of the Defendant that it was not an Obligation bona fide which might be lawfull As if a Patron which hath a Son which is not yet fit to be presented for default of age and he present another with an agreement that when his Son comes to the age of 24. years be shall resign it it is a good Obligation And this Case viz. an Obligation with Condition to resign had been adjudged good in the case of one Jones An 8 Jac. And the Councel said that he who is presented to a Church is married therto Jones Case and it is like as if a man who hath married a Wife should be bound to be divorced from her or not co-habit with her these Conditions are void But these resemble not our Case Wilson versus Briggs WIlson brought an action of Account against Briggs as Bayly of his Mannor in the County of Cambr. Tryall of an action of Account upon receit in two Counties and also as Bayly to another Mannor in the County of Suff. And this action was brought in the County of Cambr. and found for the plaintiff and Iudgment to account and found in the arrearages and Iudgment given And now the Defendant brought a Writ of Error Iudgment was reversed because it was mis-tryed for it should be tryed at the Bar by severall Ven. fac to be directed to the severall Sheriffs First it is agreed that a writ of Account against one as Bayliff of his Mannor cannot be brought in another County but only in that County where the land lies vi 8 E. 3. fol 46. Fitz. Acc. 93. see there that two actions of Account brought against one for receit in two Counties And there it is said that it being upon a day that he may have one writ and count in the two Counties But to that it is said that that proves not but that he might have two Writs wherby it might be awarded that he should answer But in this case it was resolved that it was a mis-tryall for it ought to be by two Ven. fac and tryed at Bar and it is not aided by the Statute of 21 Jac cap 13. Trin. 8 Car. Purnell versus Bridge Hil. 6 Car. Rot. 1235. Fine to two and the heirs of one to the use of them two in fee. HEnry Pernell brought Replevin against William Bridge Robert Bridge and two others William Bridge plead Non cepit and the other made Conusance and upon Demurrer the case was such Richard Braken was seised in Fee of sixty acres of arrable Land and forty eight acres of Meadow and Pasture wherof the place in which c. was parcell And he the sixth of Febr. An 18 Eliz. by Deed granted an Annuity or Rentcharge of thirteen pounds six shillings out therof to Edward Steward in Fee payable at the Feast of Saint Peter or within eight and twenty daies after And if it be arrear for eight and twenty daies after the said Feast that then he forfeit for every Fine after forty shillings with a clause of Distresse as well for the said Rent as for the said forty shillings if it shall be arrear Edward Steward seised of the Rent died wherby it descended to Ioan Iermy Wife of Thomas Iermy Daughter and Heir of the said Edward Steward and they being seised therof in the right of the said Ioan An. 41 Eliz. in Crastino animarum levied a Fine of the said Rent to Robert Brook and Isaac Iermy and to the Heirs of Robert which Fine was to the
was that none should use the Art of Weaving within the said Burrough or should have any Loom in his house or possession to have any benefit therby unlesse he had been an Apprentice to the said Art within the said Burrough for the space and term of seven years or had used the said Art within the said Burrough for five years before the making of the said Ordinance or shall be admitted therto by the Wardens and Society upon pain of forfeiture for every month twenty shillings And they further shew that after the said Ordinance made and confirmed the Defendant such a day before his inhabiting in the said Burrough and after such a day that one William Godwin being then Warden of the Weavers gave notice to the Defendant of the said Ordinance and that he afterwards c. during five months continued using the said Trade there and that he had two Looms in his possession where he had not been an Apprentice nor used the said Art for five years as before c. by which he forfeited to them five pounds viz for every month twenty shillings The Defendant pleaded Nil debet and after Verdict for the Plaintiffs it was moved by Arrest of Iudgment that this Ordinance was not reasonable and upon Arguments and Conference without arguments at the Bench it was agreed that the Ordinance was against Law and Iudgment against the Plaintiffs And Lord Hobart in Hil 15 Jac declared that we were all of opinion that Iudgment should be given against the Plaintiffs And he repeated the Case and the reasons of this Iudgment because the Ordinance was that none should use the Trade of Weaver nor have any Loom in the Town unlesse he had served c. before the making of this Ordinance so that all Apprentices which serve after shall be excluded unlesse they shall be admitted by them which is unreasonable And the Plaintiffs do not convey to themselves any good Title to be Wardens but as to the principall point of making such a restraining Ordinance the Court did not deliver any opinion Mich. 15 Jac. Rot. 2327. Dorrell versus Andrews SUsan Dorrell brought an action of Debt against Sir Eusebius Andrews London Debt The Visn of a Town within a Parish and John Cope for eighty five pounds and count upon a Lease made by her to the Defendants by Indenture by which she demised one Capitall Messuage Mannor or House called Causton within the Parish of Dunchurch in the County of Warwick and all the Stables c. in Causton aforesaid The Defendant protesting that the Rent was not behind for Plea saies that before any Rend arrear the Plaintiff entred into severall parts of the house and him dispossessed and upon that they were at issue and the Venice facias was de vicineto de Causton within the Parish of Dunchurch And it was moved in Arrest of Iudgment that the Venire facias should be of the Parish only and not of Causton for Causton is not alledged as a Town but the name of a house And the Court resolved that the Ven. fac was good for Causton is alledged as a Town in the Parish of Dunchurch and that by the addition and generall words in the Demise in which also there was an exception of part of the House as Mannor-house at Causton aforesaid so that the house is alledged to be in Causton in the Parish of Dunchurch if all be considered And if it appear that Causton is a Town or Village in the Parish of Dunchurch it will be without any doubt good And my Lord Hobart said that it had been divers times adjudged that on the Allegation of a thing done at the Town of Dale in the Parish of Sale that the Ven. fac of the Parish is good for though the Parish may contain more Towns yet it is not to be presumed but that it is of one Continent if the contrary appear not by the Record vide for that Pasch 9 Jac. between the Lord Candish and Sir George Savill c. There was another exception taken to the pleading Candish and Savill which I have not transcribed Trin. 14 Jac. Rot. 755 Swaine versus Holman RIchard Swaine Plaintiff Brownlow Dors. Wast against Thomas Holman and Elizabeth his Wife brought Wast and declared of a Lease made Anno the 8. of Eliz by the Queen under the Exchequer Seal to William Jolliff Thomas Jolliff and Elizabeth Jolliff for three lives and that William and Thomas were dead and convey the remainder to the King that now is and from him to the Plaintiff and that the Defendant Elizabeth took H. to Husband which did wast c. The Defendants confesse the Lease death and marriage as above c and say that the said Holman and Elizabeth his wife 2. Feb 40 Eliz. surrendred as well all their Estate of the said Elizabeth as the Letters Patents to the intent that the Queen should make a new Lease to the said Elizabeth and to Humphrey Holman and to Roger Holman for their lives successively which surrender the Queen accepted and the third of Febr next made such Demise and this they are ready to aver c. The Plaintiff replies and joyns Issue upon the Surrender and Demise in manner and form and the Issue was tried by a Venue which came from Westminster and the Iury found this speciall Verdict viz. the new Lease made the third of Felic in which it is recited that she had surrendred the Estate and the Letters Patents and the Queen as well in consideration of the surrender of the Letters Patents as in consideration of the payment of twenty Nobles made by the new Lease and the Iury found that the Demise made the third of Febr was with the consent of the said Thomas Holman and that the said Thomas Holman and Elizabeth his wife agreed therto and held in claiming by the said Demise And it was adjudged by the Lord Hobart and others the Iustices that the Plaintiff should have Iudgment First the consideration which procured the new Lease is the Surrender and the Surrender is not absolute but defeisable if the wife survive or if the Husband will disagree and therfore the Lord Hobart said that if Feme Lesses for years takes Husband and after the Feme takes a new Lease of the Queen for life this extinguisheth the term but if the Husband disagree then the Lease for yeers is revived And as in Barwicks Case the surrender of all the Estate where he had made a Lease for years before or where the Lease which he surrendred was void the new Lease made 〈◊〉 consideration therof is vein for the Surrender which is the consideration ought to be a good surrender of the former Estate And therfore if Lessee for life of the Blemise of the King surrender conditionally and the King reciting that he had surrendred all his Estate makes a new Lease this shall be intended an absolute Estate for a conditionall surrender within three years of
as Servant to the Bishop of Durham Absque hoc that he was guilty at the Castle of York or any where else c. And this Case was long depending and the first point was if the Defendant had confessed any conversion for that is the ground of the action and ought to be traversed or else confessed and avoided It was agreed that the Conversion is the ground of the Action Brook 1 Mar. Trespass 121. and the Inducement ought to be such as contain sufficient matter with the Trespasse vide 9 E. 4 5. 19 H 6.30.22 Then it was agreed H. 6. 35. 8. that when one takes a Distresse and such an action is brought that is no plea for that is not any conversion vide 27 H. 8.22 Coke lib. 10. fol 46 47. Request and refusall to deliver is good evidence to prove conversion but if it be found specially it shall not be adjudged Conversion and Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff because the Defendant did not claim any property and did not answer to the point of the Action for a Distresse is no Conversion Hil. 15 Jac. Coble versus Allen. Norf. Trespasse COble brought an action of Trespasse against Allen for breaking his Close at Barningham and by the new Assignment divers parcels were assigned the Defendant as to part pleads that he was seised of an House and thirty acres of Land in Colby and prescribe to have a way over them to his Common in Barningham Prescription for a Way and no place to which c. Issue joyned upon the Prescription and for the other parcels prescribe that he and all those whose Estate he hath in the said house in Colby used to have for themselves and their Families one way for Pack-horses over the said other parcels of Land in Barningham unto the Kings high way leading to the City of Norwich And Issue was joyned upon these two Prescriptions and found for the Plaintiff But it was moved in Arrest of Iudgment that the Venue was from Barningham and Colby and that in the Plea there is not mention of any place where the Common lies and therefore there is not any tryall but it was adjudged that the tryall was good for though that the proper use of a way is to some end and that ought to be shewn yet if it be only that he had a way over the Closes of the new Assignment and no place or end therof is pleaded for what cause or to what other place and Issue is taken upon the Prescription and found the Prescription is good And another reason was there by Implication it is indifferent whether the way lies in B. or in another Town and by intendment rather it may be taken to lye in B. and then if by one intendment the tryall may be good it shall so be intended But when it appears that the tryall shall be in three Towns and the Ven fac is but in two this is not aided for it is a Mis-triall and there must be a Venire facias de novo but in this case no new Venice can be awarded and then it is but a Jeofaile for not pleading in which Town the way lies and then it is alo●● and also unto the Kings high way may be taken that this Kings high way is contigue adjacent to these Closes where the way is by Prescription And for these reasons and causes Iudgment given for the Plaintiff Harding versus Bodman RObert Harding Plaintiff against Bodman Defendant Case in an action upon the Case recites that wheras the Plaintiff brought an action upon the Case against one Lenning for calling of him c. the Defendant upon the tryall being produced for the Defendant as a Witnesse gave evidence upon his Oath to the Iury Action upon the Case against one fo●giving evidence that the Plaintiff was a common lyar and so recorded in the Star Chamber by reason of which Evidence though the Iury found for the Plaintiff yet by reason hereof they gave but small Damages to the Plaintiff And upon not guilty pleaded it was found for the Plaintiff and upon motion in Arrest of Iudgment it was adjudged that this is a new invention and that no action lies for it First because that it is impossible to be known whether the Iury gave greater or lesse Damages for that or not Also by this means every man which is produced as a Witnesse by one way or other may be subject to an action upon the Case and also by any thing which appears to the Court the Evidence was true for it was not averred that Revera that the Plaintiff was not a common lyar that he was not recorded for a common lyar in the Star Chamber And for these reasons the Plaintiff Nil capiat per breve c. Trin. 15 Jac. Rot. 1968. Speake versus Richards South HUgh Speake brought an action of Debt against Edward Richards Debt for 523 l 17 s 8 d and declare that Anthony Hall and Henry Paramour 22. June 13 Jac. became obliged to the Plaintiff by Recognizance in the Chancery in 2000 l and that they did not pay it wherupon the Plaintiff had two Sci. fac.'s to the Sheriff of Middlesex Debt for money returned levied by the Sheriff who returned Nihil wherupon Iudgment for the Plaintiff and a Levari facias awarded to the Sheriff of Southampton returnable 15 Mich. which Writ was delivered to the Defendant being then Sheriff to be executed The Defendant before the Return levied by vertue of the said Writ the said 523 l 17 s 8 d of the Lands and Chattels of the said Henry Paramour parcell of the said Debt and at 15 Mich. returned that he had levied the said 523 l 17 ● 8 d parcell c. which summ he had ready at the day to deliver to the Plaintiff in part of satisfaction c. And that the Defendant although often required therto refused to pay the said 523 l 17 s 8 d by cause wherof this action accrued nor brought it into Chancery and to have the parties c. The Defendant as to three hundred and eight pounds part therof pleaded Nil debet to two hundred and fifteen pounds seventeen shillings eight pence residue therof Actio non For he said that after the Writ directed and before the return viz. 31 Augusti 14 Jacobi the Defendant at Westminster paid it to the Plaintiff upon the receit wherof the same day the Plaintiff gave an Acquittance for the same which he pleads and therby acquitted and discharged the Defendant and demands Iudgment if against his own Deed of acquittance he shall be received to demand the said money wherupon the Plaintiff demurred And it was argued by Serjeant Richardson for the Plaintiff and by John Moore for the Defendant An exception was taken that he could not plead Nil debet because that it is a Debt upon Record for he is charged by the return He is not estoppled to plead payment
be after the title devolved unto the Metropolitan And it seems also reason that he ought to admit though that the Title by Laps be accrued to the King for he claims it as supream Ordinary vide Dyer 277. quaere But in this case the Bishop which is the Defendant is bound by the Iudgement and the Writ is notwithstanding the claim of the Bishop that he admit the Clerk and the Bishop is but Servant and ought to execute the processe of the Court It was urged by Serjeant Henden one Canon Linwood fol. That if the Church be vacant when the Writ comes to the Bishop that he is bound to execute the Writ but if it be full then he certifies the Iustices And the Arch-bishop is sworn to the Canons and he vouched 22 H 6. 45. Coke lib 6. 49. and 52 Dyer 260. F.N.B. 47. Dyer 364. 14 H 7. 22. 34. H 6. 41. 9 E 3. Quare non admisit 18 E 4. 7. Trin. 16 Jac. Rot. 1999. Eire versus Bannester JOhn Eire brought an Ejectione firmae upon a Lease made by Sir Edward Kinaston against Andrew Bannester and Thomas Wenlock for Land in Norwood Challenge and after Not guilty the Plaintiff made surmiss of Kindred to the Sheriff Sir Thomas Owen to the Plaintiff the Defendant pleads that the Sheriff Non est de consanguinitate of the Plaintiff as he by his challenge supposed And because the Defendant denied the said Challenge John Eire calumnia illa non obstant prec est quod ven fac c. And at the Nisi prius the Defendants challenge the Array for consanguinity between the Sheriff and the Lessor viz. Sir Edward Kinaston and make this Averment that the Sheriff had Issue by Susan which was the Daughter of Judith the Wife of Sir Edward Kinaston and conclude it is a principall Challenge and therupon the Plaintiff demurred And it was returned upon the Postea and it seems that the Sheriff being admitted and allowed to be indifferent by the Defendants in the same Plea they which allow cannot have a Challenge to the Sheriff for the Defendants might by confession of the surmise of the Plaintiff to be true have had a Writ directed to the Coroners and although the entry is Calumnia illa non obstant that is the form of the Award and if he should be allowed otherwise afterwards to challenge the Array then it would be infinite As a man ought to alledge but one principall Challenge though he hath many so it shall be peremptory to the Defendant and when he allows the Sheriff indifferent that shall be taken to be for all causes precedent unlesse it be of latter time And so is the opinion of 20 E 4. 2. And if there be many Defendants if one challenge the Array that shall be peremptory for the others as it seems for the others ought when they challenge the Tales to shew cause presently of the Challenge for if it be quashed that shall also be against them vide Dyer 201. in Attaint vide 36 H. 6. 21. that where one challenge the Array which is affirmed the other Defendants after may challenge the Array of the Tales The second point is if it be a principall challenge or no by reason that the Lessor is not party to the Action vide 10 E 4. 12. 15 E. 4. 18. and 21 E. 4. 61. there it seems that where the Defendant justifies as Servant to I.S. and that the Land is his Free-hold it is a principall challenge that a Iuror is within the Distresse of John S. for the Title is to be tryed And now it was found by common experience that the Less●e is but Servant common recoveries at this day are but as other common Conveyances But it seems that the Law is contrary and it is not averred that this is a Lease for trying the Title and as Iudges we take no notice therof but vide 3 H 7. 2. contrary to the 10 and 15 E 4. where the Challenge is to the Array because that the Sheriff was of Kindred to him whose Free-hold was in Issue and vide 9 H 7. 22. Cognizance as Bayliff to the Abbot of Ramsey Challenge to the Array because the Sheriff was within the Distresse of the Abbot and that was not a principall Challenge by Fineux Brian and Vavasor because that he was not party to the Writ vide this very Case Dyer 300. And upon argument at the Bar the Court was of opinion that it was no principall Challenge but ought to have concluded with the favour All agreed that a Surmise which is for prevention of delay ought to contain matter which is a principall Challenge for no triall shal be of such suggestion but by the deniall of the Defendant or Confession And by the opinion of Lord Hobart and Iustice Winch cest dedire n'est peremptory to the Defendant for his time of challenge is not till the Iury come to be sworn but I hold the contrary because that he might have confessed the Surmise and so have had time And I rely upon 20 E 4. 2. there in the end of the Case it is said that the Defendant by his deniall where he saies that the Sheriff is not favourable but indifferent there he shall never have a challenge for favour unlesse he shews cause of later time As to the second Point it is no principall Challenge because it might be that the Lessor had granted over the Reversion or that the Defendant might be found Not guilty And a principall Challenge ought to contain such matter which being so the Law adjudge favourable and in this very case two Presidents scil Iudgments more strong then this case Bedforne and Dandy Hil 44 Eliz Rot 1208. Bedforne against Dandy in an Ejectione firmae upon a Lease made by Sir John Digby after Not guilty pleaded a Surmise made of consanguinity between the Lessor and the Sheriff c. confessed and therupon a Venire facias to the Coroners and after the Challenge was adjudged insufficient and a Venire facias likewise to the Sheriff was ruled Craddock and Wenlock Trin 14 Jac. Rot. 2284. Craddock against Wenlock in an Ejectione firmae upon a Lease made by Sir Robert Cotton such Challenge and Award to the Coroners and tryed and adjudged a mis-tryall and a Venire facias awarded to the Sheriff and the mis-tryall is not aided by the Statute vide Coke lib 5. Bainhams case And so by the Iudgment of the Court this Challenge was insufficient and Warburton being then sick was of the same opinion as he told me vide 8 Eliz Dyer 281. Austen and Baker in Attaint vide 33 H. 6. 21. 3. Defendants one challenge the Array of the Principall and that being affirmed the other Defendants challenge the Tales Mich. 16 Jac. Easington versus Boucher Debt Severall Defendants in Debt upon a joynt Contract may plead severall plea● EAsington brought an action of Debt upon a joynt Contract against Sir John
entred and 2 H 7. 4. takes a difference between a reall Action or Originall Suit and a Writ of Execution for upon the first the Essoin lies at any time before the fourth day but in the Writ of Execution the Defendant ought to be essoined at the day of the Essoin And Warburton said that if the Essoin be not cast before the return of the Writ it ought not to be at all for all Writs come in by Post diem Cardinals Case CArdinall an Attorney of this Court of Common Bench Case brought an action upon the case against I. B. for saying of him That he had forged the last Will of I. S. and after Issue upon not guilty it was found for the Plaintiff And moved in Arrest of Iudgment Words that it is not alledged that the Will is supposed to be forged But by the Court that was necessarily implyed and the Plaintiff had Iudgment Pasch 17 Jac. Allaboyter versus Clifford Suff. JOhn Allaboyter brought an action of Debt upon an Obligation against Daniel Clifford which was with a Condition Debt that if the Defendant perform the Award of two Arbitrators of all Actions Demanos c moved between the Plaintiff and Defendant from the beginning of the world untill the day of the date of the Obligation Arbitrement so that the arbitrement be made before the tenth day of December the Defendant plead no such award before the day the Plaintiff reply and shew that the ninth day of December they awarded of and upon the premisses and arbitrated that the Defendant should pay to the Plaintiff fourteen pounds at two severall daies and that upon the last day the Plaintiff should make a generall release to the Defendant and the Defendant likewise to the Plaintiff and alledge a breach for the non payment of the first seven pounds and aver that the fourteen pounds was awarded to the Plaintiff in full satisfaction of all suits quarrells c. depending between the Plaintiff and the Defendant at any time before the Date of the Obligation upon which Plea the Defendant demurred and objected by Attho that the Release which is appointed to be made upon the last day is not appointed but after the payment of the money and also is then to be made of more then is submitted to them But by the Court it is agreed to be a good Award for it shall not be intended that there were more matters arising between them after the date of the Obligation Also if he had made a Release untill the date of the Obligation that were a good performance And this Case had been adjudged before between Nichols and Grandie Nichols and Grandy George Andrews Case VPon a Habeas Corpus one George Andrews was brought to the Bar and upon a long return by the Mayor Aldermen and Sheriffs of London The Custome of London to give security for the payment of the Portions of Orphans and upon refusall the Debters are to be committed of their custom concerning the Orphans of Free-men and for the security of their Portions to be paid to them at the age of 21. years or at the time of their marriage or at such time as is appointed by the Will of their Father or Mother or other Free-men giving to them any Legacy they use to take sufficient security of them which ought to pay them and if they refuse then to commit them to the Counter untill they give security and that their customs were confirmed by Act of Parliament An. 7. R. 2. William Andrews a Free-man having one Son and one Daughter by Emery his Wife died this George Andrews a Free-man being Suitor to the Wife before marriage agreed that if the Wife would marry him she should dispose of two hundred pounds c. and he was bound in a Statute to permit and suffer her to make her Will and dispose therof and after she died and by her Will gave a hundred pounds to her Son and a hundred pounds to her Daughter and the said G.A. agreed to her Will and yet refused to give security to the Chamberlain of London to pay it at the day appointed by the Will pretending that he was bound by Statute to the Friends of the Orphans to perform it And by the Court he was remanded for it is a laudable Custom and the voluntary Obligation upon marriage is not any discharge as to the security by the Custom and we will not disparage the Government of the Citty Trin. 16 Jac. Wolfe versus Heydon London Debt THomas Wolfe Administrator of the Goods and Chattels of John Aldrich durante minore aetate of Edward Aldrich William Aldrich and other Children of the said John not administred by John Talbot Executor of John A or by Robert Armiger late Administrator of the said Goods and Chattels during the minority of the said Children not administred To what intents a man shall be said Executor before he prove the Will brought an action of Debt against Simon Heydon and count upon an Obligation of fifty pounds wherof ten pounds was satisfied to John Aldrich in his life and counts that John Talbot was made his Executor and died and that the money was neither paid unto the said John Aldrich the Testator in his life nor to John Talbot the Executor in his life nor to the said Robert Armiger late Administrator of the Goods and Chattels of the said John Aldrich during the minority of the Children and he produce Letters of Administration and aver that the Children were within the age of seventeen years The Defendant plead in Bar that the said Aldrich before this Writ purchased viz. such a day at S. in the Parish c. made his Will and constituted John Talbot his Executor Qui suscepit onus inde and administred divers Goods as Executor and after viz. such a day the said John Talbot made Benjamin Roblet his Executor and died and Roblet suscepit onus testament and did administer and demand Iudgment si actio c. The Plaintiff reply and confesse that John Aldrich made John Talbot his Executor and that he administred and made Roblet his Executor But he saies that the said John Talbot did not prove the Will of the said John Aldrich according to the Ecclesiasticall Law and that the said Benjamin before that he took the charge of the Testament of John Talbot renounced before the Ordinary to be Executor of the said John Aldrich or to administer any of the Goods which were the Goods of the said Iohn Aldrich or to have any thing to do therwith And therupon the Defendant demurs and Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff And in this case the Court well agrees with the replication for he was Executor before probate to pay Debts and to be sued but not to have an action though that originally the probate was temporall and it is no plea in our Law scil that he did not prove the Will but that he was not
Executor And of late times our Law for the encreasing of the credit and for the inforcing of the Probate do disallow actions brought before the Probate vide the Case upon which it was principally insisted 22 23 Eliz. Dyer 272. a. Isted against Stanley If an Executor dies before Probate and if the residue of the Goods be devised to him then Administration shall he committed to his Executor or otherwise to the next of the blood of the first Testator for now he dies intestate And although it be one dying intestate of the first Testator in Law yet if being the reall and speciall matter it agrees well with his Writ and is matter in Law scil to some purposes he dies intestate and to others not for he had power to release to pay Debts and to take a release vide Dyer 367. a It seems that his Executor shall have his Legacy But the Count is cu●bred with the Administration committed to Armiger and it doth not appear how it was dischrrged for it is only that the money was not paid to him late Administrator and it is good and the action is brought according to the Letters of Administration to him which were of the Goods not administred by John Talbot nor by Armiger which was Administrator Coppledick versus Tansey Linc. FRancis Coppledick Plaintiff in a Quare impedit against Samuel Tansey Clerk Sir Philip Tirivint Baronet Quare impedit and Richard Bishop of Lincoln Quod permittant ipsum presentare ad Ecclesiam de Ulceby and count that one Francis Coppledick was seised of the Advowson in Fee and that it was holden in Socage Tryall where no such Town is pleaded And that the said Francis so being seised devised it in tail and intitle himself as Heir in tail Tansey plead that he is Parson imparsonee of the presentment of the said Sir Philip and demand Oyer of the Writ and plead that at the day of the Writ purchased there was no such Richard Bishop of Lincoln in rerum natura and demands Iudgment of the Writ Sir Philip plead that there is no such Church called Ulceby in the County of Lincoln and demand Iudgment of the Writ The Plaintiff ●emur upon the plea of the Incumbent and as to the plea of Sir Philip he reply that there is such a Church called Ulceby in the County of Lincoln and this plea being tryed at Lincoln before Baron Bromley it was found for the Defendant for there was an union of the Church of Fordington to Ulceby and it was called Ulceby cum Fordington And it was said that Institutions and presentments were to Ulceby and Ulceby was the greater and Fordington was the lesser Church and united and therin had lost its name It was agreed that it being known by the one or by the other name had been sufficient to have found for the Plaintiff Serjeant Harris moved in Arrest of Iudgment that it being tryed Per Venire facias de vicineto de Ulceby it was mis-tryed for when Nul tiel vill is pleaded it shall be tryed per Corpus Commitatus 8 H. 6. 38 H. 8. 24 E. 4. 4 Fitz. visne 27. And he vouched 45 E. 3. 6. where such an Issue was tryed but it did not appear how the Venire was awarded And at the first time of this motion it appeared prima facie to be a mis-tryall Bawtry at another day moved it and said that the Writ is Quod permittant presentare to the Church of Ulceby and the Count according therwith it is to be intended a Town or Parish And he resembled it to the case of an Appeal against one by the name of I. S. of Dale Carpenter and he traversed that he was not dwelling at Dale and it was a good tryall from Dale And of in and at are all one but said that in the Count it is said that Edward Coppledick died at Ulceby And all the Court agreed that it is a good tryall and that it is admitted that there is such a Town and the Writ implies it And Iudgment for the Defendant Smith versus Linsey Scire facias A Scire facias against Michael Linsey late Sheriff of Kent by Smith reciting that wheras he had recovered a hundred pounds against Sir Richard Potham and had sued a Scire facias the Defendant being Sheriff returned that he levyed sixty and three pounds which he had ready at the day Scire facias against a Sheriff to have execution against him of money returned levied by him and yet he did not bring the moneys into Court and after it was removed de son Office and to know why he should not have Execution against him of the said summ with which he had charged himself by his return and the Defendant demurred and upon reading of the Record Iudgment for the Plaintiff according to the case 9 E 4 50. vide F.N.B. 165. 34 H. 6. 36. a. and 5 E. 3. 53. Fitz. Execution 101. And between Richards and Speak it was adjudged in this Court that Debt lies against the Sheriff that hath charged himself by his return that he hath levied the money Replevin Annuity for life to commence after 8. years mentioned in the Will where there is no mention made therof Cony versus Cony Linc. PAragrin Cony awows in a Replevin brought by Sir Thomas Cony his Brother for twenty marks per annum granted to him by the will of his Father for life to commence after the end of eight years contained in the Will and in the Will no mention is made of any eight years and that was averred and by the opinion of the Court it ought to commence presently Trin. 17 Jacobi Smith versus Sir John Boucher Mich. 16 Jac. Rot. 3339. London 1. EDward Smith brought a Writ of Annuity against Sir John Boucher Annuity and Thomas Jones de placito quod red ei 120 l. and Count that the Defendants by their Deed shewn in Court reciting that wheras the King by his Letters Patents had granted to them A grant of an Annuity out of the profits of Allome and to one William Turner certain Priviledges and Licenses concerning the making of Allome within this Realm and within the Realm of Ireland for twenty seven years for the Councell given before by him to the Defendant he being Counsellor at Law concerning the drawing of the Letters Patents And for his Councell to be given afterwards granted to him the said annuall summ of 40 l. for 26 years next payable at Midsomer and Christmas The Defendants plead that the King granted the sole making of Allome to them as in the Letters Patents and confesse the grant of the Annuity to the Plaintiff by Deed indented one part wherof sealed with the Seal of the Plaintiff they show c. But further said that the said Annuity was granted Percipend extra clara lucra proficua which accrue to them by the making of Allome And they aver that no clear gaines or
profits have accrued to them or any of them by the making of Allome since the making of the said Indenture wherupon the Plaintiff demur 1. And Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff for it is one good Grant of an Annuity to charge their persons And so of a Grant of an Annuity to be paid out of such Coffers or Bags vide 9 H. 6. Margery Parkers case vide 22 H. 6. 12. 2. Also the limitation is to perceive of the clear gaines and plead it by the Counter-part of the Indenture and that ought not to be but they should have demanded Oyer of the Deed and then either demur or plead that the same Deed was granted over c. 3. It is not averred that no other person received or made any clear gain but only that the Defendant made no clear gain Burglary MEmorand At the Assises holden at Winchester in the last Circuite before the Lord chief Baron Tanfield it being the third Circuite which I went with him It was a question whether one which had a Shop in the dwelling house of another and he which had the Shop work'd therin in the day but never lodged there and yet he had a house out of the Shop to the Street if this Shop be broken in the night and divers Goods stoln out therof if it be Burglary Burglary And the Lord chief Baron and I resolved that it was no Burglary because that by the severance therof by Lease to him which had it as a Shop and his not inhabiting therin it was not any Mansion house or dwelling house ergo no Burglary but ordinary Felony Mich. 15 Jac. Adavis versus Flemming Case AN action of the Case was brought for these words Thou hast forsworn thy self before the Councell in the Marches innuendo in the Marches of Wales in a Suit which I have there and I will sue thee for Perjury Words And after issue of Not guilty pleaded and Verdict for the Plaintiff It was moved in Arrest of Iudgment by Chibborn that the Common Law takes no notice of any such Councels and they are to meddle according to instructions and if it be not warranted therby then no Oath wherupon any remedy And therfore it was adjudged that if one say another is forsworn or perjured in Canterbury Court no action lies for we cannot take any notice of any Court in Canterbury which hath power to administer an Oath But Serjeant Harris said that this Councell of the Marches is established by 27 H 8 cap 32. and have power to examine Witnesses and to administer an Oath and is also mentioned in the Statute 5 Eliz. that Perjury committed before the Councellors of the Marches shall be punished by this Statute And the Court was of opinion that the action well lies for the Councell of Marches without innuendo is sufficient for there is no other Councell of Marches And as the Court take notice of the Court of requests for if one saies another is perjured there it is actionable so of this Court which is established by Statute and concern the King and therof the Iudges ought to take notice Iudgment for the Plaintiff And by Lord Hobart if one saies another is forsworn in the Common place an action lies Mich. 17 Jac. Bayshaw versus Walker Case AN action of the case was brought for saying Thou art a filtching Fellow and didst filtch four pounds from me And after Verdict for the Plaintiff it was moved in Arrest of Iudgment that the words were not actionable And so the Court resolved for the word siltching is dubious and may be by Cousenage by shifting by deceit and is not Felony but by Implication and it is not good to enlarge actions for words Plaintiff Nil capiat per breve Green versus Harrington Case Assumpsit lies not for Rent PEter Green brought an action upon the case against Thomas Harrington and counts that wheras the Defendant such a day was indebted to him in ten pounds for the rent of one House and land which he had demised to him for one year then past the Defendant promised to pay it upon request and upon issue Non Assumpsit it was found for the Plaintiff and moved in Arrest of Iudgment by Chibborn that no action lies upon this promise because it is Debt for the rent for Land and the Assumpsit is of a lesse nature as if one he indebted upon an Obligation and that being forfeited he promised to pay it no action lies for the Debt is due upon the Obligation Albanies case And the opinion of the Court accorded This was ruled in Albanies case of Lincoln● Inne in Banco Regis Trin. 17 Jac. Rot. 1849. Castilion versus Smith AN action of Covenant was brought by Sir Edward Castilion against Thomas Smith as Executor Covenant Iudment against Executors for Covenant broken by them shall be De bonis testatoris Iohnson and Barker a breach assigned by act done by the Executors and after Verdict it was moved if Iudgment should be De bonis propriis by reason the breach was made by the Executors And it was resolved that it should be de bonis testatoris And where the Writ is in the Detinet only there the Iudgment shall be de bonis testatoris vide the like Iudgment Hil. 33 Eliz. Rot 1143. between Johnson and Barker Pies Case PIe exhibited an Information upon the Statute of the 35 of Eliz. for converting of a house in London into many dwelling houses and upon Not guilty pleaded the Defendant is found guilty But be cause the said Statute is discontinued by the 43 Eliz Costs against an Informer and there is now no such Statute the Court upon motion in Arrest of Iudgment award that the Defendant eat inde sine die And whether the Defendant in this case shall have costs upon the Statute of 18 Eliz. cap. 5. was the question The words of the Statute are if any Informer willingly delay his Suit or discontinue or be non-suited or shall have the matter or the tryall passe against him by Verdict or Iudgment in Law he shal pay costs 1. Object It was objected that this Statute doth not extend but only to penall Statutes which then were in Esse Answ To which it was answered by the Court that this Statute was a perpetuall direction to all Informers 2. Object It was objected that if there be no Statute then there is no Informer 3. Object In this case Verdict is sound for the Informer and he may be presumed to be ignorant And there is no reason that he shall pay costs for default of his Councell 4. Object There is no Iudgment against him but that the Defendant eat inde sine die and that is no other then an exception in stay of Iudgment Keldridges case And a President was cited by Henden 25 Eliz. Banco Regis there upon an Information against Keldridge and another upon the Statute of 35 H. 8. for not
inclosing Woods but suffering them to lye open after cutting by the space of one month he alledged the cutting the tenth of April and the lying open untill the second of May which was not a month And upon Not guilty pleaded it was found for the Plaintiff and upon motion in Arrest of Iudgment it was awarded that the Defendant eat inde sine die and no costs And the Lord Hobart said that this Statute was made for the ease of the Subject and for avoiding and preventing of vexations and therfore did enumerate all the cases in which the Informer could not prevail and had many words that the Statute of 23 of H. 8. or any other Statute doth not give expresly costs upon demurrer and this is not within 23 H. 8. if upon discontinuance And now the matter passe against the informer be it by Verdict or Iudgment all is one for the makers of this Statute intended to curb all vexatious Informers And if it shall be suffered that Informers may inform upon Statutes not in force and pay no costs that would open a Window to the great vexation of the Subjects And for Presidents not inflicted upon they are of little esteem And I concurred and though Verdict be found for the Informer yet there being no Statute there can be no Offence and it is in Law as not guilty And this case is within the meaning and Letter of the Statute for the Statute intend costs where the cause passe against the Informer be it by default of matter or form Winch doubted of this speciall case because the matter is found for the Informer but he agreeh if it were upon Iudgment upon demurrer or speciall Verdict costs should be given And Iustice Warburton was of opinion that there should be no costs in this case for he is not capable to sue where the Statute is discontinued And so if the Venue be misawarded and he said that he had conference with the Lord chief Baron who also held that there should be no costs in this case And so the matter rests Blackburnes Case Norff. Debt AN action of Debt was brought by I. S. against Blackburne upon a Lease for a year and so from year to year And upon Nil debet pleaded the Iury gave a speciall Verdict to this effect A Devise to a Feme of a term upon condition Wells seised of Land in Fee devised them to his Daughter and her Heirs when she come to the age of eighteen years and that his Wife should take the profits of the Land to her use without any account to be made untill the Daughter come to the age of eighteen years And made his Wife his Executor and died And it was provided that the Wife should pay the old Rent and find the Daughter at School untill she could read and write English the Feme enters and proves the Will takes Husband and dies the Husband assign this term to the Lessor who brought this Action And it was found that all the Conditions were performed and that the Daughter was within the said age of eighteen viz. thirteen years And the sole question was whether it be a term for years in the Wife and whether when she takes Husband he shall have it after the death of his Wife and it was ruled clearly that it is and it being by Will it is a good Lease Another question was if this trust of Education be Quasi a Limitation personall and with intent that the Lease shall not be to the Wife any longer then she may educate her Daughter And it was agreed that it was not for any one may educate her and find her at School and there it is without any default in the Wife for it is the act of God and therfore Judgment for the Plaintiff Trin. 17 Jac. Whittingtons Case IVdgment in Debt against Ferdinand Earl of Derby Scire facias Sci. fac by the Baron and Feme the death of one of them shall abate it at the Suit of I. Whittington and his Wife she being Administrator to her Husband who had the Iudgment who brought a Sci. fac upon the Iudgment against 30. Ter-tenants they appear and all besides 3. plead that at the time of the Iudgment Ferdinand the Earl was seised in tail c. And the Plaintiff had Iudgment against the three with a cesset executio and afterwards Whittington the Husband died and this is surmised and entred vpon Record viz. the death of the Baron after the Darrein continuance and whether the Writ shall abate or no was the question And per totam Curiam the Writ shall abate for the Wife there cannot recover as a Feme sole and though this Writ be judiciall yet it is in nature of an Originall for she might have had an action of debt upon the Iudgment and ought to have that action solely after the year untill the Statute of Westminster 2. which give Scire facias and to this Writ they may plead But in Writs Iudiciall which are only Writs for the doing of execution there the death of one shall not abate it vide 19 Ass 10. 25 E 3. and vide Reads case Coke lib 10. fol. 134. Ruggles Case IN Ruggles Case upon the motion of Serjeant Arthure upon the Statute of 1 Jacobi cap. 15. concerning Bankrupts How the distribution of the Estate of a Bankrupt shall be a Commission was sued out by some of the Creditors and they pursued it and the Land was sold and it being opposed they defended their severall Suits and prevailed by a tryall at Bar And after other Creditors which before would neither partake nor aid them came and prayed to be joyned with them And the Commissioners doubted upon the Statute whether they might allow them to be joyned and the words of the Statute are That it shall be lawfull for any of the Creditors of the Bankrupt within four months after the Commission sued forth and till distribution shall be made by the said Commissioners for the payment of the Bankrupts Debts as in such case hath been used to partake and joyn with other Creditors that shall sue out the said Commission the said Creditors so joyning to contribute to the charges of the said Commission and if the Creditors came not in within four months then the Commissioners to have power to distribute It was resolved that the Commissioners may sell and prepare for distribution presently upon the execution of the Commission but untill the four months are passed they may not proceed to distribution for the Creditors which inhabite in the remote part of the Realm peradventure cannot have notice and it may be carried so secretly that if they might distribute presently that they which sued out the Commission should be only satisfied when indeed there was no default in the others Also it was resolved that the offer of Creditors to be joyned and before they be partakers is not an affectuall offer without offering to be contributory
Conversion was brought by Abraham Cartwright against Clement Underhill And upon Not guilty pleaded there was found a speciall Verdict to this effect Bankrupt Francis Bayle being a Merchant had made a fraudulent Deed to the Defendant of the Goods contained in the Count but afterwards he went abroad to Church to the Exchange and did Trade and Commerce And yet afterwards it is contained in the Indenture of Sale by the Commissioners to the Plaintiff that he had made this fraudulent Deed and that afterwards he had traded and served the Exchange untill a day after at which day he wholly absented himself And upon this speciall Verdict the Defendant had Judgment For every Deed to defraud other Creditors but those to whom such Deed is made is not sufficient to make one to be a Bankrupt But if he make any Deed after he begins to be a Bankrupt it shall not bind But upon the Statute of 1 Jacobi which makes him a Bankrupt which make fraudulent Deeds it ought not to be as this case was viz. so long before he became a Banrupt And there were many more imperfections in the speciall Verdict Hill 18. Jac. The Earl of Clanrickards Case THe Earl of Clanrikard and Frances his Wife Writ of Right brought a Writ of Right against the Earl of Leicester Essoin upon the return of an alias Summons And upon the Summons being returned but no return of proclamation made at the Church of the Parish where the Land lies upon the Lords day Post praedicationem sive Divinum Servitium there was an Essoin cast and that was adjourned in the Essoin Roll And the Demandauts perceiving the return to be insufficient they sue an alias Summons which having great returnes as all the Writs issuing out of this Court in a Writ of Right or other reall actions ought to have was returnable Oct Hil And the Tenant cast an Essoin upon the alias Summons And it was moved at the day of Essoin and now also at the first day of the Term by Serjeant Harris that an Essoin did not lye for he had an Essoin before And by the Statute de essonii calumniand 1● E 2. Non faciant quia alias se essoviant And the Statute 31 Eliz cap 3. which gives the Proclamations hath prouided that no Grand Cape shall be awarded upon this default but only an alias Summons so that the Writ is good and stands and therfore he shall not be otherwise essoined But it seemed to the Court to be otherwise here for the first Essoin is as Nul and therfore vide Dyer 252. that when the Sheriff return tarde in a Formedon and the Tenant is essoined and that is adjourned it is of no effect but he shall be essoined upon the other Writ of alias c. vide 24 E. 3. Br Essoin 24. accord also vide 21 H. 6. That upon the resummons after the death of the King the Tenant shall be Essoined and yet the first Writ and all is revived And in this case though the party may appear to the first Writ ●ne note besoigne de ject un essoign for the nature of that is to save a default so that no Grand Cape shall be awarded and there no Grand Cape ought so be avwarded and therfore the Essoin before not avoidable Hil. 18 Jac. Rot. 739. Bridgeland versus Post Dower Counter-plea to the View BRidgeland against Post and his Wife in a Writ of Dower the Tenants demand the View and the Demandant counter-pleads the View Quod le tenant n'ad entry nisi per le Baron And therupon the Tenant demur And it was adjudged a good Counter-plea and the Tenant ousted of his View Accord 9 E. 4. fol 6. vide 2 H 4. 24. Pasch 19 Jac. King versus Bowen Case Words KIng brought an action of the case against Bowen a Minister for saying Thou art a false forsworn Knave and didst take a false Oath against me at a Commission at Ecclesall innuendo a Commission sued out of the high Commission the Defendant justifie and after issue tryed and found for the Plaintiff it was moved in Arrest of Iudgment that these words were not actionable for it doth not appear in the Count what Commission nor out of what Court nor what matter he did depose but generally that he had taken a false Oath at a Commission The former words forsworn Knave will not maintain an action otherwise of Perjuted Knave for that shall be intended in a legall sence and no Innuendo will supply matter which give not cause of action nor the Iustification But the words ought to contain scandall in themselves without any supplement An action lies for saying one had forsworn himself in a Court Baron and to say he had forsworn himself in the Common place but to say that one hath forsworn himself at the Bar innuendo the Bar of the Common place will not maintain an action Querens nil capiat per breve Pasch 19 Jac. Tippin versus King Wast SIr George Tippin Plaintiff in an action of Wast against King and alledge Wast in severall Closes Sparsim Inquiry of damages And Iudgment by nihil dicit and an Inquiry awarded the Iury found but eight pence Damages And upon motion for a new Writ it was resolved that the Iury ought not now to enquire of the Wast And therfore the difference is when the Plaintiff upon the distresse recover upon the Statute there the Statute gives power to enquire of the Wast But in this case the Wast is confessed Per nient dedire Ewer and Moyle Dyer 204. a. accord And it was so adjudged between Ewer and Moyle upon demurrer in Wast there the Wast is confessed and the Writ shall be only to enquire of the Damages so if the Plaintiff will release his Damages he shall have a Writ upon Iudgment of the place wasted Mich. 18 Jac. Rot. 2805. Pitt versus Chick MAtthew Pitt brought Replevin against Chick Replevin The Defendant avow for that the place contains five acres which lye between the Lands of Sir George Speck And that the said Sir George Speck and all his Ancestors Prescription to have Herbage de temps d'out c. have used to have Herbage and Pasture of the said five acres viz. if they were sowen then after the reaping untill re-sowing and if they were not sowen then for the whole year and convey Title to the said Herbage by Lease in writing to him and avow Damage feasant And it was urged that he which had all the profit for a time and the sole profit had the Free-hold and that is not a thing which lye in Prescription semble al Common or so pasture for a certain number of years And it was said that a Grant de vestura terrae or de herbag terrae for one and twenty years is a good Lease But it was adjudged that it is a good Avowry and he had only profit a
Prender and that he might have an Assise or justifie for Damage feasant And he which hath the fore-crop is he which hath the Free-hold 15 E. 2. Fitz. Prescription 51. And the very case in temps E. 1. Fitz. Prescription 55. and this sole feeding might have Commencement by Grant and therfore a good Prescription Iudgment for the Avowant Trin. 19 Jac. Wilson versus Stubbs WIlson brought Replevin against Ralph Stubbs Replevin The Defendant avow as Bayliff to the Earl of Northumberland for Amercements within a Leet at Toxcliffe And upon Issue joyned and tryall at the Common Pleas by Default it was alledged Supersedeas upon Indempnitate nominis that Ralph Stubbs was dead and the Plaintiff would proceed and had Iudgment Damages and Costs sixteen pounds and a Capias awarded to the Sheriff of York and Ralph Stubbs the Son as is supposed is taken and had an Indempnitate nominis which Writ being directed to the Iustices they award a Supersedeas And now upon divers motions the sixteen pounds was brought in Court and they proceed upon the Indempnitate nominis The question was if the Supersedeas lye therupon being that it is only a surmise and matter en fait and lies properly and more frequently for preventing an Arrest upon Outlawry and after that the party is taken upon the Outlawry vide 5 E. 4. 23. vide lib Intrat and it is matter not frequent in use and is in nature of an Audita Querela and the party shall find surety to pay the Debt if it be found that he be not another person And the Court inclined strongly that it is no Supersedeas but it is much in the discretion of the Court vide lib Intrat 5 E. 4. 36. bone Case and fol. 51. 53. Mich. 19 Jac. Allen versus Swift Case ALlen brought an action of the case against Swift and declared That wheras he bargained and sold that is to say Merchandized for Lead in the County of Derby Words and therby hath acquired money towards his livelyhood The Defendant said of him He is a Bankrupt and is not able to pay his debts but will run the Country It was found for the Plaintiff and moved in Arrest of Iudgment by Serjeant Harvey that the action lay not because that the Plaintiff shewed not that he used it as his Trade nor that he gained his living by buying and selling Also he is entituled Gentleman But the Court hold that the action would well lye and it had been adjudged 14 Eliz. That a Tanner shall have an action for such words Mayes versus Sidley Case Consideration of forbearance MAyes brought an action of the case against Sir Isaac Sidley and count that wheras one was indebted unto the Plaintiff in a hundred pounds by Obligation the Defendant in consideration that the Plaintiff at his request would forbear to sue the said party and if he did not pay it the Defendant would And upon Non assumpsit pleaded and Verdict for the Plaintiff Hitcham moved that is no good consideration for it is uncertain for if he forbear one hour one day this is a forbearance And he resembled it to Palmers Case forbear him a little while and if he do not pay it I will This was adjudged for the Plaintiff in Banco Regis but afterward by a Writ of Error it was reversed And he cited a President which was shewn of the 36 of Eliz. where the case was the same in effect with this And Iudgment reversed but it might be for other Errors And the Court inclined that this action lye for when it is alledged that he did forbear it shall be intended of such a forbearance by which the party had ease and benefit and shall be a competent and convenient time and that shall be convenient time as in other cases As Tenant pur auter vie shall have convenient time to remove his goods after the death of Cestui que vie And it shall be convenient time to purchase a Writ by Iourneys Accounts And it was said that there were many Presidents of this case and of the like actions for if he doth not forbear convenient time then it is no consideration and it being left indefinite the Law will judge of the convenient time but it was adjourned and after the first day of Hil. 21 Jac. This case was moved by Hitcham and he said that the Writ and Count vary for the Writ is Per magnum tempus distulit And the Count saith that he did forbear for the space of a year and more Also no time is put in the Writ but is in the Count and that he did forbear by a year and more after that so that it doth not appear that he did forbear till the Writ purchased for that appear to be half a year after the year passed and he ought to forbear it totally Richardson answered him that the breve Writ did not comprehend the time and circumstance but the matter and substance and ●ot at large for then it should not be breve As in a case sur Trover no day in the Writ but in the Count and forbearance of a year and more being alledged and issue taken and found for the Plaintiff it shall not be intended that he had sued and not forbeared till the commencement of that Suit And it is like to a grant of a Rent pleaded without Deed and issue joyned upon non concessit and it is found Concessit and good for it shall be intended effectuall c. And the Court shewed their Iudgment and concurred that Iudgment should be given for the Plaintiff And this difference was taken when the promise appear to be such that it shall not be any benefit to the party in whose behalf it was requested as forbearance for an hour or a little time there it is not good but where it is generall and not limited to any time that shall be a 〈◊〉 ill forbearance or at least a forbearance for a convenient time and that ought to be alledged for such a time which the Court shall adjudge a convenient time Lord Hobart agreed but he said that it is not a totall forbearance for then it should be that he should not sue him at all but that he will forbear is good by the subsequent forbearance and there is no variation between the Count and the Writ but the Count illustrateth and amplifies the Writ Iudgment pro querente Pasch 20 Jac. Suggs versus Sparrow IN a Scire facias against the Bail Scire facias he plead that after the Iudgment and before any Writ of Capias was sued out against the Principall he died And upon Demurrer the Court adjudged it a good plea Bayle is discharged where the Principall died before Capias awarded Tadcaster against Hollowell Timberley and Calverly and i● this case a Iudgment was cited Hil 10 Eliz. Tadcaster brought debt against Hallowell Hobs was Bail and the Plaintiff recovered The
and art used by Bakers of Bread in private mens houses as by common Bakers And every ●ooman which bake in private if she be a good Housewife use the art and mystery of a Baker And if a man had said generally that he had gained his living by buying and selling and not shewn what Trade he had used it is not good Therfore the Trade ought to be alledged and so sufficiently that the Court may judge him such a person as is within the Statute of Bankrupts Also Winch said that it is not alledged that he gained his living by buying and selling any thing which concerne his Trade And I was of the same opinion and relyed upon the case of 11 H. 4. 45. An nation upon the case against an Inn. keeper and shewed that he was lodged there and his Horse was stoln And the Defendant pleaded a plea that he delivered to him the Key of the Stable c. And by the Court the Writ shall abate because he did not shew that he was a common Hostler And therfore Iudgment arrested And the Court agreed that if the Count were good the words would maintain an action for a Baker is a Trade mentioned in the Statute 5 Eliz. but it ought to be a Common Baker Trin. 20 Jac. Whiteguift versus Eldersham Second deliverance JOhn Whiteguift brought a Writ of second deliverance against Richard Eldersham for taking of his Cattle at Clanding in quodam loco vocat Corles Paud. The Defendant makes Conuzance as Bayliff to Sir Francis Barrington because that the place c. was parcell of the Mannor of Curles and that John Curles was seised before the time Avowry c. therof and held it of Sir Francis Berrington as of his Mannor of Clanding by Knights servies viz. by Homage Fealty survitium scuti and by the Rent of ten pounds payable yearly at two Feasts of which Rent the said Sir Francis was seised by the hands of the said John Whiteguift as by the hands of his very Tenant in his Demsn as of sea and Avow put Homage infect wherupon the Plaintiff demur And shew for cause that the Defendant had not shewn any Title to have Homage of the said John and that the Cognizance is repugnant and no sufficient Seisin alledged of the Services and that the shewing of the Seisin is not formall vide Bevils case Coke lib 4. fol 6. Seisin of Rent is the Seisin of the Services and he might have traversed the Tenure and the other party ought to shew whether he had done Homage before vide 44 E. 3. 41. when an Avowry is upon the Baron for the Homage of the Feme it is sufficient Avowry without shewing that he had Issue by her and yet if he had not Issue he could not avow upon the Baron but that ought to come on the other party vide 5 E. 2. Fitz. Avowry 209. A man avow for Homage and alledge Seisin of Esenage without Homage and good And after upon motion this Term Iudgment was entred for the Defendant Trin. 20 Jac. Sherwells Case MAry Sherwell brought a Writ of Dower Dower and in But therto it was pleaded that the Father of the Husband of the Demandant was seised of one house and sixty acres of Land in Fire and made a Feoffment to the use of himself for life and after to the use of the Husband and the said Mary for their lives Joynture which bars Dower for the Ioynture of the said Mary the remainder to their Heirs And that afterward the Father died in the life of the Husband and aftre the Husband died And adjudged that this is no Ioynture to bar Dower according to the opinion in Varnons Case because that the Estate of the Wife at the Commencement take not effect immediatly after the death of the Husband Et quod abinitio non valet tractu temporis non convalefeit And if a Feoffment to the use of the Baron for life the remainder to I. S. for years remainder to the Feme for her Ioynture this is not a Ioynture he bar Dower Trin. 20 Jac. Francis Curle versus James Cookes AN action of the case was brought and Count Case that the King by his Letters Patents An 12 Jac. reciting the Statute of 31 H. 8. for erecting of the Court of Wards and the Officers therof and that two persons shall be named by the King and his Successors who shall be Auditors of the Land of the Kings Wards And reciting the Statute of 33 H. 8. for the making of the Master of the Wards and Liveries and his power had made him the Plaintiff one of his Auditors and granted to him the Fees due and accustomed to be had and 40. Marks fee and gave power to him as one of his Auditors according to the said Statute and to exercise it with the Fees in as ample a manner as others had used And averred that at the time of the Patent made and at all times after the erection of the said Court the Auditors had engrossed all the Accounts of the Feodaries and that they had taken therfore two shillings and shewed that he was sworn and exercised that Office and shewed the Oath specially and that he had by vertue therof ingrossed divers Accounts of the Feddaries and had taken therfore two shillings and that the Defendant having conference with the Plaintiff concerning his Office and his bone gesture therin said to him You have received money for ingrosement of Feodaries innuendo the said Fees for ingrosement of the Accounts of the Receivers Feodaries and other Officers aforesaid which I will prove is Cousenage And then and there spoke further You are a Couse●er innuendo the said Francis decepisse Dominum Regem 8. subditor in executione officii praedicti and you live by Cousenage deceptionem dicti Domini Regis subditorum shorum in executione officii ful Non Culp verdict pro Plaintiff and Damages thirty three pounds It was moved in Arrest of Iudgment by Attho that first it is alledged that the Fee of two shillings is lawfull and that he said You have received monies for ingrossement of Feodaries which I will prove is Cousenage innuendo the Fees aforesaid which are lawfull and then by his own shewing it is not Cousenage 2. It is insensible Ingrossements of Feodaries for they cannot be ingrossed but their Accounts 3. That Ad tunc ibidem for the other words are for other words spoken at another time of the same day and they are not actionable for they do not relate to his Office Also the words will not maintain action for the word Cousenage is generall and of an ambiguous interpretation and therfore no action lies for that And he resembled it to Sir Edmund Stanhops case He hath but one Mannor and hath got it by swearing and forswearing Midlemore and Warlow And to the Case of Midlemore and Warlow An. 30 Eliz. Thou art a cousening Knave and hast cousened me
of forty pounds And adjudged that no action lay vide Coke lib 10 fol 130. in Osbornes Case Thou art an arrant Knave a Cousener and a Traytor Action lies only for the word Traytor and yet all being spoken at one time aggravate and Damages shall be intended to be given only for these words which are actionable vide ut supra fol 131. if the words be alledged as spoken at severall times and as severall causes of actions there if the Damages be entire the Plaintiff shall not have Iudgment if any of the words do not bear action Stanley and Buddens case And other cases were cited that Cousenage is not actionable And Mich 40 Eliz Stanley and Buddens or Boswels case there an Attorney brought an action of the case for these words Thou art a cousening Knave and gettest thy living by Extortion and didst cousen one Pigeon in a Bill of Costs of ten pounds Adjudged that the last words were actionable This case was adjudged for the Plaintiff but I was absent in Chancery and heard not their reasons for it was doubtfull Hil. 17 Jac. Empson versus Bathurst Debt FRancis Empson brought an action of Debt upon an Obligation against George Bathurst the Defendant pleaded the Statute of 23 H. 6. That an Obligation taken Colore officii of any one in their Custody Obligation voided by the Statute 23 H. 8. with any other Condition then for appearance at the day mentioned in the Processe shall be void And shewed that an Extent issued out of the Chancery to extend the Land of Robert Leigh upon a Statute Staple of twelve thousand pounds in which he was obliged to the Plaintiff And that Anthony Thirrold was Sheriff and Charles Empson was under Sheriff and shewn an Extent of the Land returned and before any Liberate it was agreed that the Defendant should pay to the under Sheriff two and thirty pounds ten shillings and that he should be bound to the Plaintiff his Brother for the security therof to the use of the said Charles and therupon he entred into the said Obligation which by the said Statute is void the Plaintiff replyed and shewed that by the execution of the Extent he agreed to pay him the said two and thirty pounds ten shilling and pleaded the Statute 29 Eliz cap. 4. wherupon the Defendant demurred And it was adjudged against the Plaintiff Extortion for this Obligation is extortion and Colore officii and void by the Commen Law Extortion is when any one Colore officii extorquet feodum non debitum plus quam debitum aut ante quam debitum vide Dive and Maringhams case an Obligation made by Extortion is against Common Law for it is as Robbery vide Coke lib 10. fol 100. Dyer 144. And in this case the opinion of the Court was that no Fee is due to the Sheriff by the Statute of 29 Eliz. cap 4. because the Fee is not due untill execution Copulative extent and delivered in execution if it were a Statute-Merchant in which is a Liberate included then the Fee is due Also it was agreed that by the Statute the Sheriff ought to have six pence in the pound where the summ exceed a hundred pounds for all and not twelve pence in the pound Mich. 20 Jac. Bullen versus Gervis RObert Bullen brought an action of Debt for 12 l. upon an Obligation against William Gervis Administrator of Owen Godfrey Debt It is no plea for the Administrator to say the Intestate died outlawed Young and Pigot The Defendant pleaded that the Intestate was outlawed at the Suit of Francis Murrell after Iudgment and pleaded it specially and being so Outlawed died and that Outlawry is in full force Iudgment si Action wherupon the Plaintiff demurred 8 E. 4. 6. There by Littleton between Young and Pigot in an action of Debt against Executors it was holden a good plea to say that their Testator was Outlawed for they are charged to the King for the Goods Genny said that the plea amount only to this that they have not any Goods and so answer argumentative And 21 E. 3. 5. By Brian in a Writ of Debt brought against Executors it is a good plea to say that their Testator was Outlawed sans luy intitle 36 H. 6. 27. By Prisot in Debt against one as Executor of Jane the Defendant said that the said Jane was his Wife and demand Iudgment si action and it seems this is no Plea because that a Feme Covert may have many things which the Husband shall not have as Choses in action and she may make Executors if the Baron agree And Prisot said Sir It seems to me that it is no good plea for an Executor to say that his Testator died Outlawed Cansa qua supra Quare cur hona materia Vpon the reading of the Record it seems that it is no plea for it is only by Implication and that may be given in evidence Also the Executor or Administrator may have divers things which are not forfeitable to the King as if the Testator had Mortgaged his Land upon Condition that if the Mortgagee pay not at such a day to him his Executors or his Heirs a hundred pounds that then it shall be lawfull for him or his Heirs to re-enter and after and before the day the Testator is outlawed and makes his Executors and dies and at the day the Mortgagee pay the money to the Executors that is Assets and not forfeited is the King So if Tenant for life of a Rent be outlawed and the Rent arrear and makes his Executors and die this arrearage is due to the Executor and is Assets and not forfeited for the Rent was a Free-hold for which during his life no action of Debt lay and these arrearages recoverable by the Executors are Assets Also if this should be a good plea which is only by Implication he might therby prevent the Plaintiff of his recovery Also though choses in action are by information in the Exchequer recoverable yet if the Executor bring a Scire facias upon the Iudgment he shall recover and shall be accountable to the King therfore and the Debtors of the Intestate though he was outlawed may pay the debts to him and his release is a good discharge to them Also it was agreed that an Executor or an Administrator might bring a Writ for the reversall of the Outlawry and the Outlawry is not a Bar to him Woolley versus Bradwell Trin. 37 Eliz. Rot. 2954. And one case was vouched by Attho which was adjudged upon the like plea in this Court Trin 37 Eliz Rot 2954. Woolley against Bradwell and his Wife Executors of Sir Thomas Mannord and the matter depended a year and was argued and adjudged that it was no plea for it is but by argument and so being Serjeant Hobart said this Argument ought to be infallible also this is the matter and not the form for in this case the Demurrer was generall and the Book of
are not Affirmative or Positive but a supposition only as if he had said Nowels case I will indite him for such a matter it was vouched to be adjudged 51 Eliz. in Nowels case that to say of an Attorna●● That he was Cooped for forging Writs maintain an action And 14 Eliz. He is infected of the Robbery and he smelleth of the Robbary adjudged actionable In balls case There is never a Purse cut in Northamptonshire but Ball hath a part of it will not bear action But the Court would not declare their opinion Quia sub spe Concordiae Griggs Case GRigg which is the Examiner at Chester preferred there this Bill in the Chancery vocat the Exchequer Prohibition ●i Chester against one which inhabite within the same County and another which inhabite in London being executors to one to whom the said Grigg was indebted by Obligation which Obligation was put in suit in the Court of Common Pleas and there proceed to processe before the Bill exhibited and the Bill concern equity of an Agreement that the Testator had promised that one Robert Grigg should assign a lease of Tithes to the Plaintiff in consideration of his entry into the said Obligation and if he could not procure it that then the Obligation should not be prejudiciall to him and he which was distributing in Chester answered therto And an Order was made by Sir Thomas Ireland Vice-Chamberlain that Processe should be awarded to him which dwelleth in London And an Inquisition was granted to stay the proceedings at Common Law And afterwards upon the motion of Serjeant Hitchar● Sir Thomas Ireland was in Court and shew all that he could to maintain the Iurisdiction viz. That the Contract was made in the County Palatine and that the priviledge pursued the Plaintiff and ipse qui est reus non potest eligere c. Yet it was resembled to ancient Demesn and Guildable And by Lord Hobart he which inhabit at Dove● by this way may be inforced to come and answer to a Bill in Chester which would be infinite trouble and the matter is transitory And it was resolved that the Court of Chester had not power in this case but it belonged to the Chancery of England And a Prohibition was granted Hil. 20 Jac. ONe case was in the Kings Bench viz. Trespasse Baron and Feme brought in action of Trespasse Quare clausum fregit Trespasse by Baron and Feme for breaking the Close of the Baron for the Battery of the Wife and for Battery of the Feme the Defendant pleaded a License to enter into the Close made by the Baron and not guilty as to the Battery And the Court was moved in Arrest of Iudgment because the Husband and Writ could not ioyn for the weaking of the Close of the Baron the Writ shall abate for all But the Lord chief Iustice and Iustice Dodderidge were of opinion that the Plaintiff should have Iudgment And it seems that the Law is clear accordingly vide 9 E 4. 51. Trespasse by the Husband and Wife for the Battery of them both the Iury found so much for the Battery of the Husband and so much for the Battery of the Wife and so Damages assessed severally because the Wife could not soon with the Husband in an action for the Battery of the Husband for that part the Writ shall abate and for the Battery of the Wife they shall recover for for that they ought or joyn in an action vide 46 E 3. 3. Baron and Feme brought Trespasse for the Battery and Imprisonment of the Wife and the Writ was ad damnum ipsorum and yet good vide 9 H 7. in the case of Rescous and 22 E 4. 4. there is a good diversity when the Writ is falsified by the shewing of the party himself and when it is found by Verdict And Iustice Haughton and Iustice Chamberlain were of opinion that the Writ should abate for it is apparent that as to the Trespasse Quare clausum fregit the Wife had no cause of action But this case being debated at Serjeants Inn in Chancery Lane at the Table the Lord chief Baron was of opinion that Plaintiff should have Iudgment for that part and he held the Writ good in part and Reddenda singula singulie Me●enest issint as it seems no more then in the case of 9 E 4. for there the Writ shall avate for part And if an action of forgery of Deeds be brought against two for forging and publishing and found that one forged and the other published the Plaintiff shall have Iudgment Howell versus Auger Trespasse IN an action of Trespasse brought by Noy Howell against Auger for breaking of a house and five acres of Land in Fresham upon Non Culp pleaded the Iury gave a speciall Verdict Devise of a Fee after a Fee Robert Howell seised of the Land in Question and of other Land by his Will in writing devised this Land to Dorothy his Wife for life and devised this Land to Thomas Howell his younger Son to him and his Heirs in Fee under the Condition which shall be afterwards declared And the other Land was also devised to Dorothy for life and to the Plaintiff and his Heirs in Fee under the Condition hereafter limited If Dorothy died before the Legacies paid then he will that they shall be paid by Noy and Thomas his Sons portion-like out of the Houses and Lands given them And if either of my Sons dye before they enter or before the Legacies paid or before either of them enter Then I will that the longer liver shall enjoy both parts to him and his Heirs And if both dye before they enter then his Executors or one of them to pay the Legacies and to take the profits till they be paid and a year after and made Dorothy his Wife and Christopher Roys his Executors and died Dorothy entred the Plaintiff Noy by his Deed In 33 Eliz. in the life of Dorothy released to Thomas all his right c. with Warranty Release of Lands devised before they be vested Thomas by his Will devised the Land for which the action is brought to Agnes his Wife and died in the life of Dorothy and before Legacies paid Dorothy died and Agnes entred and took to Husband Henry Ayleyard who leased to the Defendant upon whom Noy entred and the Defendant re-entred And Si super totam Materiam c. And this Case was well argued at Bar in two Terms and the first question was If this Devise of a Fes after a Limitation be good or not much was said for it and they relyed upon a case which was adjudged in the Kings Bench between Pell and Brown of such a limitable Fee Pell and Brown And many Cases put that this operate as a future Devise Executory as well as one may by his Will Devise that if his Son and Heir dye before he marry or before that he come to the age of
Demandant proceeds with the Issue And at the Nisi prius the Tenant relying upon the Non-suit it appeared not by whom the Petit Cape is awarded And now upon motion by Serjeant Henden who relyed upon the Non-suit and that the Essoin was allowable by the Statute of Westminster 2. post exitum habeat unicam Essoniam but it was ruled and the Prothonatories all said that it had been the constant use that no Essoins are allowed in Dower which is festinum remedium vide Stat. 12 E 2. cap 1. hath tolled the Essoin of the Service of the King in many cases and given to the Demandant in many cases power ad callumpniand Essoniam And the words of the Statute are Non jacet in breve de dote quia videtur deceptio prorogatio juris vide Dyer 324. There after the Issue joyned Essoin at the day of the Venire facias though no Venire facas be sued out but only awarded upon the Roll. Mich. 21 Jac. Linleys Case An Information against an under Sheriff for taking of 30 s for making of a Warrant upon a Capias ad satisfaciendum AN Information was exhibited against Linley under Sheriff to Sir Gny Palmes Sheriff of York vpon the Statute 32 H 6 and it was shewn that he being under Sheriff a Capias ad satisfaciendum was delivered to him to Arrest one Francis Lancaster upon a Iudgment for a hundred and three pounds The Defendant Colore officii took of the Plaintiff thirty shillings for making of a Warrant upon this Writ against the form of the Statute wherby he hath forfeited forty pounds Vpon not guilty pleaded and Verdict against the Defendant it was alledged in arrest of Iudgment that the making of a Warrant upon a Capias ad satisfaciendum which is for Execution is not within the Statute because the Statute speaks first of Fees to be taken upon the Arrest of the party when he is bailed viz. twenty pence to the Sheriff and four pence to the Baily then appoints that the Sheriff lets to Bail every one that is taken upon Bill or Plaint besides them which are taken for execution Outlawry c. and then comes the clause That nothing shall be taken for making of any Precept or Warrant but four pence and provision for the Obligation Condition and Fee and that all Obligations taken by any Sheriff Colore officii that these shall be void and that for every offence committed against the Statute he shall forfeit forty pounds The Lord Hobart inclined that this making of the Warrant upon the Capias ad satisfaciendum and the taking of thirty shillings is within this Statute and he resembled it to Dive and Maninghams case in Plowden where an Obligation taken of one in Execution is void by this Statute vide that the clause in this Statute for the Obligation is absolute without any restraint but that all obligations taken by colour of his Office with any other Conditions are made void This taking of thirty shillings for making of a Warrant upon a Capias ad satisfaciendum is extortion at the Common Law for which he may be indited but whether it be within this Statute or no is doubtfull Another Exception was taken to this Information That it doth not appear by this that this Writ of Capias was directed to the Sheriff of York or to any other Sheriff And then admitting this to be a Capias ad satisfaciendum directed to the Sheriff of Lincoln and it is delivered by an ignorant hand to the Sheriff of York to make a Precept therupon and he makes a Precept and takes thirty shillings this is not within the Statute also Colore officii will not serve for it is generall and it ought to be shewn that it was a Capias and to whom it was directed And although that all Processe should be generally directed to the Sheriff yet some may be to the Coroners or some by the mis-prision of the Clerks may be omitted as Jacobus Dei gratia c. tibi precipimus and say not Vice-Comiti Eboracensi salutem And an Information ought to be certain to all common intents and it is like to an Indictment And in an action upon the case against an Attorney because that he Corruptive and in deceit of the Plaintiff and in his name had acknowledged satisfaction to his damage and saies not wheras Revera non fuit satisfactus that is not good And the Court was of opinion for this cause that the Plaintiff should not have his Iudgment Bickner versus Wright AN action upon the case was brought by Richard Bickner against John Wright Case Prescription for the making of a Cony-borough in damage of his Common The Plaintiff prescribe to have Common omni tempore anni and saies not Quolibet anno And after Verdict adjudged good Trin. 22 Jac. Goldenham versus Some GGoldenham brought a Writ of Dower against John Some Dower Judgment in Dower upon Voucher who vouched the Heir of the Husband who entred into the Warranty and said that he had no Assets The Demandant had Iudgment for her Dower because nothing is said to the contrary against the Tenant with a Cesset executio untill the Warranty be determined And the Tenant which vouched when the tryall was at Assises made default but it was said that it should be the default of the Vouchee for he was dead before the Assises And now it was moved that the Demandant might have execution And by Henden it was said that the Voucher is not determined for he might vouch the Heir of the Vouchee But it seemed that the Voucher was determined and that he shall have the benefit of his Warranty by Scire facias out of the Iudgment but the Court doubted if the Plaintiff shall have Iudgment against the Vouchee conditionally if he had Assets if not against the Tenant or absolutely vide 3 H 6. 17. Dyer 202. there it is conditionall vide Dyer 256. there the Iudgment is against the Tenant upon Vouchee of the Heir in Ward to the King and that presently with a Cesset executio vide 46 E 3. 25. If the Vouchee be Counter-pleaded the Demandant shall have Iudgment presently vide 48 E 3. 5. Br Voucher 38. the Iudgment shall be against the Heir conditionally which is vouched in Dower vide 2 H 4. 8. there upon the Voucher of the Heir which makes default upon the Summons sequatur suo periculo the Iudgment is against the Heir conditionally if not against the Tenant and so Iudgment against one not party to the Suit and which never appeared And in this case the Iudgment against the Tenant with a Cesset executio may be good because that it doth not appear by any of their Pleas but that the Demandant is confessed to have her Dower none of them say that he is ready to render her Dower as the Heir ought when he enter into the Warranty This Term Serjeant Finch moved the case
and diversity of opinion which was between the Lord chief Justice and the Lord Hobart the now Lord Keeper and the Lords by an Order respited this matter as to the Fine of the Plaintiff and gave damages to the Defendant and referred it to the opinion of all the Justices And they all una voce except Iustice Harvey who insisted upon the damages given to the party that they should not be pardoned agreed that the Contempt and Offence for the scandalous Bill exhibited was pardoned and not within the Exception for it cannot be intended that the Plaintiff exhibited a Bill upon which he should not be fined but this exception was of that which was laid to the charge of the Defendant and the Defendant may have his remedy at Common Law and the Contempt which is accidentall to the Offence is pardoned and by consequence the Fine Pasch 2 Car. Crane versus Crampton Case CRane brought an action upon the case sur assumpsit against Crampton and count that in consideration of moneys paid the Defendant did assume to give to the Plaintiff a Ruff-band at the day of his marriage And he alledged in facto that such a day and at such a place he was married Notice and that the Defendant notwithstanding that he was requested such a day and a year after the said marriage had not given to the Plaintiff the said Ruff And upon Non assumpsit it was found for the Plaintiff and moved in Arrest of Iudgment that the Plaintiff had not alledged any notice given to the Defendant of his marriage And by the opinion of me and my two Brothers Harvey and Yelverton Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff For the Defendant ought to take notice therof at his perill unlesse he had provided to deliver the Ruff after marriage and after notice therof for if he ought to have notice no place being agreed upon where it shall be given then he should be compelled to enquire and to find him and give notice and paradventure he could never give him notice Also it is agreed if one be obliged to pay to another twenty pounds within three months after he come from Rome there shall no notice be given of his return but the Obligor ought to take notice at his perill And if it were with a Condition that I. S. that is not party to the Obligation shall do such a thing there shall not be notice And this case of an Obligation is more strong for there is a penalty and if it were to pay ten pounds when a Fair shall be at Dale there he ought to take notice And they agreed the case of 8 E 4. fol. _____ an Obligation to perform an Arbitrement there no notice is necessary for it is the act of a third person And if any notice be requisite the Request imply it as it was adjudged in the Kings Bench between Hodges and Baldwin Hodges and Baldwins case But my Brother Crook seemed to be of a contrary opinion for when the duty arise upon the notice there notice ought to be Iudgment pro Querente Laicon versus Barnard Lincoln LAicon Plaintiff against Barnard one of the Attorneys of this Court Case for Trover and Conversion of a hundred Sheep the Defendant said that he brought Debt in the County Court of Lincoln Recovery in trespass for taking of goods is no ba● to an action upon the case sur trover against one Hacliff for two hundred and eighty pounds upon an Obligation by Iustices and recovered and that these Sheep were delivered to him in Execution as the Sheep of the said Hacliff And that afterwards and before this action the Plaintiff brought an action of Trespasse against the now Defendant for taking of these Sheep Quare caepit abduxit And it was found for the Plaintiff and Damages to two pence And averred that they were the same Sheep and the Plaintiff replyed that the Damages found by the Iury were only for the taking and chasing and not for the value And that this Action was for another Trespasse wherupon the Defendant demurred and it was adjudged for the Plaintiff for for any thing that appears which the Defendant hath confessed upon his Demurrer it is not for the same Trespasse Also the Damages of two pence cannot be given for the value of the Sheep Also the Plaintiff when a Trespasse is done to him may retake his Goods and yet he shall have an action of Trespasse for the taking of them And every taking viz. abduxit import a chasing and no man will say that by the recovery in Trespasse when the Plaintiff had his Goods that therby the Defendant shall have the property But it is true that if the Plaintiff recover the value therby he waves the property and by this way the Defendant shall have the property vide 2 R. 3. 14. 4 H 7. 5. 6 H 7. 8. and Iudgment for the Plaintiff Yelverton at first baesitavit but afterwards agreed Pasch 2 Car. Wades Case AN action upon the case was brought by a Feme Case as Administratrir against the Lady Wade Executrix of Sir William Wade Non assumpsit was pleaded the Venire facias was well but the Hab Corp. Nisi pr. was entred the Plaintiff Where the Nisi prius shall be amended c. and the Defendant Executrix of Sir H Wade c. And it was amended by the Court and there was the difference taken that when the Nisi prius is so mistaken that if it should be amended the Iury should be prejudiced viz. that it may falsifie their Verdict then it shall not be amended but in this case it is but the Writ by which the Iury is warned to appear And the authority of the Iustice of Nisi prius is not by that but by the Juras which was well and as it ought to be Also they have their Authority by the Statute of Westm 2. vide Dyet 106. In Wootons Case there the Jurat was well and omitted in the Nisi prius Anthony Coke Also the Issue was between Wooton and Cooke and Temple where Temple had confessed the action vide there that many omissions of the Record of Nisi prius are to be amended Brown was of the contrary opinion to Walsh Weston and Dyer Trin. 2 Car. Farrington versus Arrundell Entred Hil. 22 Jac. Rot. 4462. Debt AN action of Debt was brought by Lionell Farrington Qui tam pro se quam pro Domino Rege Debt upon a penall Statute is not gone by the death of the King c. against Thomas Arrundell upon the Statute of 23 Eliz. for not coming to Church and the Defendant demurred upon the Count And then King James died And if this action be abated or not by the death of the King was the Question Vide the Statute of the 1 E. 6. cap. 7. vide Coke lib 7. fol 30. And concerning this was diversity of opinion in the Common Bench for my Brother
Defendants disturbed her The said Bishop died and the Defendant plead that he is parsona imparsonata ex presentatione Domini Regis nunc And said that Sir Thomas Chichley was seised in Fee of the said Advowson and also of the Mannor of Preston and divers other Lands in the County of Cambridge which Mannors and Lands were holden of King James in Capite by Knights-service and being so seised he died and that this Advowson and the Mannor descended to Thomas Chichley his Son and Heir who at the time of his death was within age And that afterwards by force of a Writ of Diem clausit extremum this matter was found wherby the King seised the body and was possessed of the Mannor and of the Advowson and that the said King James died the King which now is suscepit regimen hujus regni and was possessed and the Church became void And the King by his Letters Patents under the great Seal presented the Defendant Thompson and traversed the Grant made by Sir Thomas Chichley to Thomas East and Edward Anger of the said Advowson as the Plaintiff had alledged The Plaintiff replyed protestand● that the Defendant is not Parson Imparsonee and that the Plea is insufficient Pro placito dicit quod non habetur aliquod tale recordum talis inquisionis post mortem praedicti Thomae Chichley militis modo forma prout wherupon the Defendant demurred And after many Arguments at Ba● by Attho Henden Davenport and Hedley it was adjudged for the Defendant And that the Title of the Plaintiff being traversed brought to have been maintained and not to traverse other matter alledged by the Defendant for Traverse upon Traverse is only when the matter traversed is but Inducement Also it appears fully that the King is entituled to this Presentation though there was not any Office vide 21 E 4. 14 H 7. and then all the Titles of the King should be answered and therfore the deniall of the Office is not materiall for if he dies seised the King may present without Office vide Bendoes case 21 Eliz Rot 1378. Crachford against Gregory Lord Dacren when the King is entituled by Office to an Advowson though the very Title be in a stranger yet if the Church be void and he which hath Title present this is but Vsurpation Vide 17 H 7. Kel 43. 11 H. 8. ibid. fol. 200. vide 21 E 4. 1. 5 E 4. 3. or 13. of things which lye in Grant the King is in actuall possession Crachfords case 20 E 4. 11. Stamf. fol 54. 2. R 3. issue 7. 28. 23 H 8. Kel 97. new Book of Entries fol 130. vide there that Traverse is allowed to be taken upon Traverse vide for that 9 H 7. 9. 10 E ● 49. Dyer 107. 10 E 4. 2. 3. 6 E. 3. ● When two Titles appear for the King as here the dying seised of the Advowson of Sir Thomas C. who also died seised of the Mannor of Preston holden in Capite that is a good Title and the Office found is another Title and ●oth ought to be answered in case of the King vide for that matter 37 H 6. 6. 24 H 3. 27. 46. E. 3 25 9 H 6. 37. 39 H 2. 4. 40 E 3. 11. In case of severall charges to the King although the King be not party yet they ought to be answered Hedley Serjeant argued for the Plaintiff that the presentment of the King tolls all the right of the Plaintiff and therfore only ought to be answered and he ought not to traverse the Title of the Plaintiff which by the Plea was toll'd but notwithstanding that he answered not the dying seised of the Advowson and the Tenure by which the King is intituled upon the Office and therfore all is one And the Plaintiff had waved his Title and not maintained it And therfore Iudgment was given for the Defendant Pasch 4 Car. Congham's Case Rescous by the Plaintiff in the primer action IN an action upon the Case against Congham and his Wife That wheras the Plaintiff hath recovered in Debt against one and had a Writ of Capias ad satisfaciendum directed to the Sheriff of Cambridgeshire and the Sheriff had arrested the party and had him in Execution for the Debt the Defendants rescued the party and he escaped Vpon Not guilty pleaded the Feme was found guilty of the Rescous And it was moved in Arrest of Iudgment by Aleph that this action lies not because that Debt lies against the Sheriff And the Sheriff shall have an action for the Rescous vide F N B. 102. And properly this action of Rescous lies where it is upon mean processe and that is for the delay by the Rescous and damage may be greater or lesser accordingly And the Rescous is according to the condition of him which is arrested for if he may be easily taken again and that he becomes not more poor that then the damage is the lesse vide 16 E 4. fol. 3. But after divers motions at Bar Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff And the Lord Richardson held strongly that it lies And this Tort may be punisht at the Suit of the party who had damage therby viz. the party the Sheriff or Baily And Harvey and Crook agreed but Yelverton and my self doubted therof because that it is an immediate wrong to the Sheriff or Baily and the party had no prejudice in common presumption because that his action is transferred to the Sheriff who hath more ability to satisfie him Farrington versus Caymer LIonell Farrington qui tam pro se quam pro c. brought an Information against William Caymer Information where it shall be brought upon the Statute of 23 H. 8. cap. 4. against Ale-brewers and Bear-brewers for selling Bear at higher prises then were assessed by the Iustices upon Not guilty pleaded the Plaintiff had a Verdict at Norfolk Assises And it was moved in Arrest of Iudgment that the Information was brought in the Common Bench and yet it was brought and tryed in the proper County where the Offence was committed wheras by 33 H. 8. cap 10. 37 H 8 cap 7. 21 Jac cap 4. it ought to be brought in the Country and not in the Common Pleas. And upon grand deliveration and hearing of councell of either part the Court resolved that Iudgment should be given for the Plaintiff And first it was agreed that wheras by the Statute of 23 H. 8. cap. 4 which appoint that the Iustices of Peace assesse the prises of Barrels and other Vessels of Beer and that they which sell against that rate forfeit six shillings c. to be recovered by action of Debt Bill Plaint or Information in any Court of Record in which no wager of Law c. and gives one Moyety to the party which will sue and the other to the King no action may be brought in any Court of Record but onely in one of the four Courts of Record at Westminster
refusall was within the time of six years and it was adjudged for the Plaintiff because that the request is the cause of the Action for without it he could not have his action And the sole matter upon which Davenport insisted was that this was a Contract by the Husband wherupon the Plaintiff might have an action of Debt against him and then it is but an Assumpsit in Law and the request is not cause of action And therfore he said as well as Debt lies upon the delivery of Cloath to a Taylor for the making Garments therof so an action of Debt lies for the summ accompanying the speciall matter viz. for the payment of so much as the making shall be reasonably worth vide Coke lib 4. fol 147. so Debt lies as well against the said Sir Arthur upon this promise being made then and there he vouched 34 E 1. Fitz Debt 167. vet N. B. fol 62. 30 E 3. 18. 19. 27 H 8. Tatams case But the Court inclined that no action of Debt lay against Sir Arthur upon this Assumpsit but only an action of the case upon the request Mich. 4 Car. Treford versus Holmes Case Assumpsit in consideration of forbearance TReford brought an action upon the Case against Holmes as Executor and counted that wheras the Testator was indebted to the Plaintiff the Defendant in consideration that the Plaintiff would forbear the said Debt for a reasonable time assumed to pay it And this promise was made in December and he shew forbearance untill March next And upon Non assumpsit pleaded and Verdict for the Plaintiff Serjeant Thinn moved in Arrest of Iudgment that it is no sufficient consideration for the incertainty of the time if it had been for a little time it had not been good But the Court adjudged it good for the Court ought to judge of the time whether it be reasonable vide Isaac Sidleys case before Then he moved another Exception which was that he had not shewn and averred in the Count that the Defendant had Assets at the time of the promise vide Coke lib 9. fol 93. 94. Baines Case that ought to come on the other part or otherwise it shall be upon Evidence if it be necessary And Iudgment for the Plaintiff Mich. 5 Car. A strange increase of Water in Westminster-Hall MEmorand That on Friday the twenty third day of October by reason of the greatnesse of the Spring-tyde and a great Flood the Hall of Westminster was so full of water that neither the Serjeants could come to the Bar nor any stand in the Hall for there was a Boat that rowed up and down there and therfore all that was done my Brother Harvey went to the Stairs which came out of the Exchequer and rode to the Treasury and by this way went and set in the Court and Adjourned all the Iuries for it was the fourth day del tres Mich. And after that we were in the Exchequer Chamber and heard four or five motions of the Prothonatories there This comming into Court was not of necessity unlesse it had been the Essoin day or that the Court should be Adjourned as Craft Animar The Chancery and Kings Bench sate for they came by the Court of Wards Freeman versus Stacy Mich. 5 Car. BEtween Freeman and Stacy upon a speciall Verdict the Case was y The Plaintiff count upon a Lease by Indenture for one and twenty years rendring Rent and in debt for the arrearages of this Rent it appears that the arrearages of the Rent for which the action was brought were due six years and more before the action brought And the Lord Richardson was of opinion Arrearages of Rent reserved by Indenture is not within the act of 21 Jac. of Limitations that Iudgment should be given against the Plaintiff because the Statute of the 21. of King James cap. 16. extends to Debts for arrearages of Rent expresly But I and my Brother Harvey and Brother Yelverton concurred that this action of Debt being upon a Lease by Indenture is not limited to any time by this Statute but is out of it and shall be brought as before the making of this Statute The words are All actions of debt grounded upon any lending or Contract without specialty All actions of Debt for arrearages of Rent c. And this is an action upon a Contract by specialty 4 H 6. 31. he ought to declare upon the Indenture and it is a Contract viz. a Lease And there is cause of using the Indenture every half year And it was resembled to the case upon the Statute of 32 H 8. of Limitation a Rent-charge which is founded upon a Deed or a Reservation of a Rent upon a Fee-●●mple by Deed are not within the Statute of Limitation And nothing in this Statute was intended to be limited which was founded upon a Deed And the words Debt for arrearages of Rent are supplyed and satisfied by the arrearages of Rent upon a Demise without Deed. And as to the Obligation that he proof of payment might be wanting when the occasion is brought so long after the Rent became due that might be objected to Debt upon an Obligation where the day of payment is for a long time past And afterward the Lord Richardson mutata opinione agreed with us And Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff Trin. 6 Car. Shervin versus Cartwright SHervin brought a Writ De rationabile parte bonorum against Cartwright and counted of Custom in the County of Nottingham Rationabl pars bonorum is not within the ● Statute of 21● Jac. of Limitations and shew all specially and the conclusion was that he detaineth particular Goods of the party Plaintiff which appertained to him as his part and portion And upon Non detinet pleaded it was found that the Plaintiff was intituled to this Action many years before the Statute of 21 Jac. and that he had not brought his action within the time limited by the said Statute And upon the speciall Verdict the Case being argued by Serjeant Ward for the Plaintiff it was adjudged for the Plaintiff First because that this Action is an Originall Writ in the Register and is not mentioned in the said Act and though that the Issue is Non detinet yet this is no action of Detinue for a Writ of Detinue lies not for money unlesse it be in bags but a Rationabile parte bonorum lies for money in Pecuniis numeratis vide the Book of Entries Rationabile parte bonorum And this action lies not before the Debts be paid And the Account was that therby it might be known for what it should be brought and that in many cases requires longer time then the Statute gives Another reason was that Statutes are not made to extend to those cases which seldom or never happen as this case is but to those that frequently happen Also this Statute tolls the Common Law and shall not be extended to equity And upon all these
use of the said Robert and Isaac and their Heirs for ever by force therof and of the Statute 27 H 8. they were seised of the said Rent in Fee and after the said Robert died and Isaac survived and is yet seised Per jus Accrescendi and for Rent arrear c. and for the said forfeiture of forty shillings they avow wherupon the Plaintiff demur And upon Conference between the Iudges they all agreed that by this Fine which granted to Brook and Jermy and the Heirs of Brook to the use of Brook and Jermy and their Heirs that they were in by the Statute of 27 H 8. and were Ioyn-tenants of the Rent for otherwise there would be such a Fraction of the Estato that Brook should be in by the Common Law and Jermy by the Statute and that is not according to the Statute And it appears that the use was limited by the Fine it self and not by any Indenture And the principall reason is upon the Statute of 27 H 8. which is where two or three are seised to the use of one or two of them Cestui que u●e shall be adjudged to have such Estate in possession as they have in use Iudgment pro Defendent Memorand That in this Term a motion was made for the filing of a Writ of Entry in a Common Recovery suffered by Sir John Smith upon a Purchase and all was well done and the Writ made and sealed Filing of a Writ of Entry many Termes after but by the negligence of the Attorney it was not filed and it was Unanimo assensu resolved that it should be filed and that after the death of Sir John Smith for it is but to perfect a Common Recovery which is a Common Conveyance And this was denied in the case of one Allonson for there Error was brought and Diminution alledged and a Certificate that there was no Writ by the Custos brevium And it is ordinary to file these Writs at any time within a year without motion Mich. 8 Car. Harbert versus Angell CHarles Harbert Plaintiff against Angell Case Words in an action upon the case of words which were Thou art a Theef and hast cousened my Cosin Baldwin of his Land And after Verdict for the Plaintiff it was moved in Arrest of Iudgment that the words would not maintain action And at the first Iustice Crawley and Iustice Vernon were of opinion that the former part of the words were actionable and that they were not extenuated by the subsequent words but they agreed if it had been for thou hast robbed c. it would be otherwise And the Lord Heath and Iustice Hutton were of a contrary opinion and that the words And and For are in this case to have one effect and declare what Theef he intended And they relyed on Birtridges case Coke lib 4. And upon this diversity of opinion the Lord Heath conferred with the Iustices of Serjeants Inn in Fleetstreet and we with the Lord Richardson and they all agreed that the subsequent words explained his intent and meaning viz. the Robbery and cousening of the Land And Verba sunt accipienda in mitiori sensu As to say Thou hast stoln my Corn it shall be intended Com growing so in Arrowes case Arrowes case 19 Jac. Thou art a Theef and hast stoln ten Cart-loads of my Furzes adjudged not actionable for it shall be intended of Furzes growing Quaerens nil capiat per breve Ram versus Lamley Norff. RAm brought an action upon the case against Lamley and declared That wheras he was Bonus legalis homo and free a suspitione feloniae the Defendant maliciously want to the Major of Linn and requested a Warrant of him being a Iustice of Peace against the Plaintiff for stealing his Ropes The Major said to him Be advised and look what you do the Defendant said to the Major Sir Words I will charge him with flat Felony for stealing my Ropes from my Shop Quorum quidem verborum c. And after Not guilty pleaded and Verdict for the Plaintiff Hitcham moved in Arrest of Iudgment And the Court unanimously resolved that these words being spoken to the Iustice of Peace when he came for his Warrant which was lawfull would not maintain an action for if they should no other would come to a Iustice to make complaint and to inform him of any Felony Quaerens nil capiat per breve Mich. 8 Car. Lamb versus West Trin. 8 Car. Rot. 333. SIr John Lamb Knight brought Replevin against Thomas West and count Replevin that the Defendant took his Beasts at Blisworth in quodam loco vocat Thorny Close The Defendant avowed as Bayliff to Sir William Sheapherd and derived Title by a Lease to Michael West for ninety years if he and Thomas West the Defendant Demand of Rent and one Hutton West should so long live And the said Michael 19. Aprilis An 20 Jac. granted a Rent-charge of ten pounds per annum to the said William Shepheard and his Executors out of the place in which c. for the residue of his Tearm to be paid at the house of Thomas West in S. And the said Mich. granted that if the Rent he arrear by eight and twenty daies being lawfully demanded at the said house he should forfeit twenty shillings for every day that it should he arrear and if it be arrear by six months being lawfully demanded at the said house then he might distrain for that and the Nomine poenae And for Rent arrear by a year after demand due c. he makes Conuzance And therupon the Plaintiff demurred generalls And after many Arguments at Bar the Iustices delivered shortly their opinions severally and all argued that it is a Rent-charge and then a Distresse is incident to a Rent-charge which is in its creation a Rent-charge as well as if one makes a Lease for life or years rendring Rent and if it be lawfully demanded then it shall be lawfull to distrain for it None will deny but that he may distrain for this Rent without any demand And the diversity is between a Penalty and a Rent for if the Avowry had been for any part of the Nomine poenae then without actuall demand at the day he could not have distrained therfore vide Maunds case Coke lib 7. fol 28. And all agreed that when a Distresse is for Homage if it be once tendred and refused he cannot distrain without demand vide Litt 34. 21 E 4. 6. 16 17. 7. E 4. 4. That where a Rent is reserved upon a Lease and an Obligation to pay it yet that alters not the nature of the Rent 22 H 6. a good case Rent is reserved upon a Lease and an Obligation to perform Covenants that extends not to the Rent reserved but if it be to pay the Rent then it shall be demanded there it is said that if Rent be tendred and refused the Lord or Lessor may distrain without demand It was agreed that
the said Francis was seised in Fee and before the time of the Trespasse supposed viz. 8 Jac in consideration of a Marriage to be between the said Francis his Son and the Plaintiff for her Ioynture made a Feoffment therof to the use of the said Francis and Rachel the Plaintiff and to the Heirs of the said Francis upon the body of the Plaintiff begotten the remainder to the Heirs of Francis in Fee and shewed the marriage and that by force of the Statute of 27 H 8. they were seised ut supra is limited Absque hoc that the aforesaid Francis Tayler the Father of the aforesaid Francis the Son died seised of the Tenements aforesaid with the Appurtenances de nova assignat in his Demesn as of Fee Modo forma prout praedictus defendens superius allegavit hoc paratus est verificare c. unde c. wherupon the Defendant demurred Vide 3 H 6 Brook Traverse 30 H 6 7. Brook Traverse 359. In Trespasse the Defendant plead his Freehold the Plaintiff plead the dying seised of his Father and that he is Heir and entred and that the Defendant disseised him the Defendant traversed the Disseisin and not the dying seised of his Father and good vide the said Book of 30 H 6. 7. by Prisot if I in Assise plead that my Father died seised in Fee that I entred as Son and Heir to him and was seised untill by R. disseised who enfeoffed the Plaintiff upon whom I entred here the Disseisin is not traversable but the dying seised vide 33 H 6. 59. Wangford put this case In Assise if the Defendant plead that his Father was seised and died seised and give colour to the Plaintiff the Plaintiff ought to traverse the dying seised and not the possession of the Father which is the cause of the dying seised Vide 30 H. 6. fol 4. Entry in nature of an Assise the Defendant plead that W. was seised in Fee and enfeoffed him and give colour the Plaintiff replies that W. was seised in jure Uxoris and that he had Issue and his Wife died and he was Tenant by the Curtesie and made a Feoffment sans ceo that W. was seised modo forma and Issue taken and there it is said that the Issue is well taken This case was adjudged for the Plaintiff because that no dying seised is pleaded so that it might be traversed but with a Sic scisitus obijt Also the matter only traversable here is the seisin in Fee modo forma for by the Replication Seisin joyntly with the Plaintiff and to the Heirs of the body of the said Francis with a Fee-simple in him is confessed and that is good with the Traverse Memorand That this Case was moved by Serjeant Hitcham Trin. 10 Car. And Serjeant Hedley moved for the Defendant and vouched 5 H 7. 7. and the Record was read and all the Court agreed that it was a good Traverse And that Iudgment should be given for the Plaintiff Pasch 10 Car. Dawe versus Palmer Case JOhn Dawe Plaintiff against William Palmer in an action upon the Case and count that wheras he was a Fuller and had used the Trade of Falling and therby acquired his livelyhood and was of good Credit Words c. The Defendant said of him Trust him not for he owes me a hundred pound and is not worth one Groat And at another day he said He is a Bankrupt Rogue And upon Not guilty pleaded the Iurors found for the Plaintiff and gave entire Damages And it was moved in Arrest of Iudgment that the first words were not actionable and then the Iury having given entire Damages the Plaintiff should not have Iudgment for any part vide Osbornes case Coke lib 10. But in this case after many debates it was resolved by the Court that the Plaintiff should have Iudgment For the first words are actionable at Common Law before the Statute Trust him not he is not worth one Groat Go not to buy of I.S. a Merchant for he will deceive you Of an Inne-keeper Go not to such an Inne for he is so poor that you can have no good entertainment Of an Atturney Use him not for ●e will cousen you All these words are actionable He will be a Bankrupt within seven daies And for the other words That he is a Bankrupt Rogue that is resolved Coke lib. 4. to be actionable And it was a Case Pasch 10 Car. in a Writ of Error brought in the Exchequer Chamber upon Iudgment given in the Kings Bench between Dunkin and Laycroft Dunkin and Laycroft for words spoken of a Merchant who had been at Hamborow in partibus transmarinis and there h●d used the Trade of a Merchant and Factor Thou innuendo the Plaintiff camest over from Hamborow a broken Merchant And adjudged actionable and so affirmed in the Exchequer Chamber And upon all these Authorities the Court gave Iudgment for the Plaintiff Mich. 10 Car. Deanes Case DEane being robbed in an Hundred in Kent brought an action upon the Statute of Hue and Cry and a speciall Verdict being found t●● Dourt intended was If one be assaulted to be robbed in one Hundred Hue and Cry and he escape and flye into another Hundred and the Theeves instantly pursue him rob him there if the Hund. in which he was robbed should be solely charged And the opinion of the Court was that it should but upon reading the Record this appeared not to be the Case And the Court was informed that the Sheriffs had taken the Goods of one in execution who was not inhabiting within the Hundred at the time of the Robbery committed but came afterwards And the Court was of opinion that he was not chargable Mich. 10 Car. Knight versus Copping RObert Knight brought an action upon the case against Valentine Copping one of the Attorneys of this Court count Case That wheras one Edw. Loft had brought an action of debt for 30 l. against him And therupon such processe was that a non pros was entred costs of 30 s. assessed for the now Plaintiff An action of the case for ● entring Judgment after non pros the now Defendant being Attorney for the said Ed. Loft having notice therof unduly and maliciously procured a judgment to be entred for the said Ed. Loft against the now Plaintiff sued execution against him wherby he was taken and imprisoned untill he was delivered by a writ of Supersedeas The Defendant Protestando that there was no such Iudgment for the said Edward Loft against the said now Plaintiff nor that he was taken in Execution therupon for plea saith that there is not any Record of the said Non pros The Plaintiff replies that at the time of the said Iudgment entred for the said Edward Loft And when the now Plaintiff was taken in Execution and imprisoned therupon the said Iudgment of Non pros against the said Edw. L. and